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单词 drum
释义

drumn.1

Brit. /drʌm/, U.S. /drəm/
Forms: 1500s drombe, 1500s droom, 1500s–1600s drom, 1500s–1600s drome, 1500s–1600s dromme, 1500s–1600s droome, 1500s–1600s drumbe, 1500s–1600s drume, 1500s–1600s drumm, 1500s–1600s drumme, 1500s– drum, 1600s drumb; also Scottish pre-1700 droum, pre-1700 drwme.
Origin: Origin uncertain. Perhaps formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: drumslade n.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps (i) shortened < drumslade n. (compare the α. forms at that entry, which appear to show gradual phonetic reduction, perhaps as a result of auditory misapprehension of a foreign-language compound), or perhaps (ii) < one or more similar names of the percussion instrument in continental Germanic languages: Old Frisian trom , tromme drum (only in the compounds tromslēker , trommeslēker drumsler n.; West Frisian tromme ), Dutch trom , (now regional: Eastern) tromme drum (Middle Dutch tromme (1497); also †trumme (1527 in an apparently isolated attestation in a compound)), Middle Low German trumme drum, German (now regional) Tromme , Trumme , (now regional: Central and Southern) Dromme , Drumme drum (Middle High German trumbe , trumme , (in late sources) drumbe , drumme ), all probably ultimately of imitative origin. Compare also ( < Middle Low German) Old Danish trombe (Danish tromme , †trumme ), Old Swedish trumba tube, cylinder (Swedish trumma also drum). Compare a number of Germanic nouns of similar form, all in sense ‘trumpet, horn’, which may suggest a semantic development from a hypothetical original sense ‘loud-sounding musical instrument’: Old Dutch drumba , trumba (Middle Dutch trompe does not continue this, but was reborrowed < Old French trompe trump n.1), Old High German trumba , trumpa (Middle High German trumbe , trumme , (in late sources) drumbe , drumme ), Old Icelandic tromba . Compare also French trompe and the other Romance words for ‘trumpet’ cited at trump n.1 which may derive < an unattested West Germanic (probably Frankish) noun with the sense ‘trumpet’ or ‘horn’ (so Französisches etymol. Wörterbuch at *trumba), or may show independent imitative formations in Romance (so J. Corominas Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico (ed. 2, 1981) at tromba).Ulterior etymology. The fact that the English word always shows initial d , whereas most of the corresponding forms in the cognate Germanic languages have initial t , has often been considered to pose phonological problems. However, these might not pose a serious obstacle to borrowing from another Germanic language. The German forms with initial d (which reflect voicing as a feature of many Central and Southern German dialects) appear to lack direct historical contact with the English word; however, a form with initial d is attested very early in Old Dutch drumba (where it is the expected counterpart of Old High German trumba ), and such early evidence could conceivably be taken as implying originally wider currency of such forms in languages where they are not attested in written records. Compare the following quot., which shows a vernacular form with initial d in an Anglo-Norman linguistic context; it is unclear whether this is to be taken as showing an earlier instance of the English word, or an (otherwise unattested) Anglo-Norman word:1430 in P. Studer Port Bks. Southampton (1913) 96 Issant William Hardeman, issant per Petre Botsak: xxij peres de drommes, valor ij noble—cust. ij d.; iiij dozeine de pels de conyn—cust. ob. The usual word for the percussion instrument in modern German is Trommel (Middle High German trumbel , trumel ), a suffixal derivative formed with the cognate of -le suffix 1. Its formal parallel Dutch trommel (1497 in Middle Dutch) may either show an independent formation < tromme + -el -le suffix 1, or a loan < German, or a deverbal derivative < trommelen to play the drum (see drumble v.2). Specific senses. In sense 5 after classical Latin tympanum tympanum n. in its post-classical Latin anatomical sense (compare tympanum n. 2a). In sense 7a after French tambour (1698, in the passage translated in quot. 1702, or earlier in this sense); compare drum sieve n. In sense 8a probably after the corresponding specific use of French tambour drum (see tambour n.); compare tambour n. 5. In sense 11(a) after French timbale timbale n. (1740 in this sense: R. A. F. de Réaumur Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire des insectes V. 166).
I. The musical instrument, and directly related senses.
1.
a.
(a) A percussion instrument typically consisting of either a hollow cylindrical frame with a taut membrane or skin covering one or both ends, or a deep bowl-shaped frame with a taut membrane or skin covering the open end (cf. kettledrum n. 1), and played by striking the skin with a stick or sticks or with the hands.Earlier called a tabor or tympan.
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun]
tympanc825
taborc1290
taborna1340
tambour1484
drumslade1527
drum?1534
tympany1534
tympanum1675
skin1929
?1534 tr. Dialoge Julius sig. f.iiiv The melodye of the shawmes, the thondryng of drommes [L. tubarum tonitrua].
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. cxxvv & sodainly strake vp a dromme or drounslade.
a1556 N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister (?1566) iv. vii. sig. G.iiij Now sainct George to borow, Drum dubbe a dubbe afore.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. ix. sig. I3 At sound of morning droome.
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing ii. iii. 14 I haue knowne when there was no musique with him but the drumme and the fife. View more context for this quotation
a1617 P. Baynes Comm. Epist. First Chapter Paul to Ephesians (1618) 32 We heare not the Drumme, the trumpet, the clattering of armour.
1691 J. Ray Wisdom of God 185 A Membrane..stretched like the head of a Drum.
1751 T. Smollett Peregrine Pickle I. ix. 61 With the addition of a drum, bag-pipe, and Welch-harp, [they] regaled the guests with a most melodious concert.
1775 Covent-Garden Mag. June 233/2 In the procession, the fifes and drums went a head of the squadron, and the horns, clarinets, and bassoons in the rear.
1817 C. Wolfe Burial Sir J. Moore in Edinb. Monthly Mag. June 277/2 Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral note, As his corse to the rampart we hurried.
1846 H. H. Wilson Hist. Brit. India 1805–35 II. vii. 307 He entered on the following morning..with drums beating, and colours flying.
1934 Z. N. Hurston Jonah's Gourd Vine ii. 59 The great drum that is made by priests and sits in majesty in the juju house.
1970 Times 18 Dec. 20/2 The atmosphere was charged by groups of musicians beating a variety of drums.
2010 L. Coffman Butterfly Moments 33 She then decided that I would be twirling a baton and Wayne would be playing a drum.
(b) With qualification denoting an instrument of a particular kind.bass drum, double drum, tenor drum, snare drum etc.: see first element. Recorded earliest in war-drum n. See also kettledrum n. 1.
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1593 G. Peele Famous Chron. King Edward the First sig. A3v Welcome manly followers, That..on your war drums carry crownes as kings.
1604 T. Dekker Magnificent Entertainm. sig. E2 Nine Trumpets, and a Kettle Drum, did very sprightly & actiuely sound the Danish march.
1713 W. Derham Physico-theol. iv. iii. 127 The little Bones and Muscles of the Ear-drum do the same Office in straining and relaxing it, as the Braces of the War-drum do in that.
1786 T. Busby Compl. Dict. Music Side-drum, the common military Drum.
1831 Sci. Tracts 1 288 Fitted to the rim of bone, in a manner similar to the parchment over the barrel of a snare drum.
1897 M. Kingsley Trav. W. Afr. vi. 114 In the street one sees the characteristic standing drum..and one or two talking-drums besides.
1952 New Yorker 1 Nov. 6/2 Candido, whose peculiar fancy is bongo drums.
2012 Post-Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) 16 Nov. c2/2 The film's producers rented four vintage instruments—an over-the-shoulder tenor horn, a clarinet, a snare drum and a bass drum.
(c) In plural. A set of drums and other percussion instruments such as cymbals, esp. as played by one person in a jazz, pop, or rock band, etc. (cf. drum kit n. at Compounds 2).
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun] > set
drumset1920
drums1921
1921 Delta (Sigma Nu Fraternity) Dec. 268/1 Brother Norris made the Glee Club trip this year, playing the drums in the jazz orchestra.
1928 Etude Music Mag. July 521/2 There is only one correct way of learning to play drums and, mind you, when the word drums is used it means the basic elements of the entire percussion section, tympani included.
1975 Freeport (Illinois) Jrnl.-Standard 14 Oct. 6/3 ‘Messing around’ back home..includes playing the drums and mouth organ in the Meade County Senior Citizens Hillbilly Band.
2012 T. Taylor & L. S. Nicholson Through Indigo's Eyes xi. 132 I slung my guitar on my shoulder and tuned it while Sarah set up her drums.
b. figurative and in figurative contexts. Frequently with allusion to the idea of beating a drum as a rallying signal or to stir up strong emotion, or to signify a particular state of affairs. Cf. to beat the drum at Phrases 4.
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1577 G. Whetstone Remembraunce Gaskoigne sig. A.iij.v My Doomes day Drum from sin dooth you awake.
1583 R. Greene Mamillia i. f. 22 The drumme of fancy, strikes up the Alarum in the Lovers heartes.
1628 Z. Boyd Last Battell Soule 1202 Did not his open scandals strike the Drum of rebellion against the heauens?
1663 S. Butler Hudibras: First Pt. i. i. 2 And Pulpit, Drum Ecclesiastick, Was beat with fist, instead of a stick.
1797 Star 11 Nov. 3/2 Her gold..stimulates the audacity of our counter-revolutionists collected throughout the French territory, wherever the drum of liberty is not heard.
1833 Niles' Weekly Reg. 3 Aug. 1/1 Certain newspapers in which ‘the drum ecclesiastic’ is most loudly and wickedly beaten.
1865 W. Whitman Drum-taps 41 In peace I chanted peace, but now the drum of war is mine.
1968 A. J. Arberry tr. Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī Mystical Poems cxiii. 97 The drum of immortality has been beaten; the eternal kingdom has arrived.
1995 Oxf. Compan. Philos. 24 Conflict is particularly acute between the analytic tradition..and those who march to the drum of continental thinkers.
2010 M. T. Bernath Confederate Minds iii. v. 181 Southern writers..set their pens in motion to the beat of the drums of war.
c. In similative expressions, as the type of something hollow or taut.(as) tight as a drum: see tight adj., adv., and n.2 Additions.
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1647 tr. Hunayn ibn Ishaq in H. Hammond Of Power of Keyes vi. 148 The excommunicate was found hard and swelled as a drum or timbrel.
1677 R. Plot Nat. Hist. Oxford-shire 165 The Tree being within as hollow as a Drum.
1755 G. Wirgman tr. L. Heister Med., Chirurg., & Anat. Cases & Observ. xv. 21 The intestines alone are distended..rendering the belly tense like a drum.
1778 F. Burney Let. 3 Sept. in Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1994) III. 132 How should a Woman who is as empty as a Drum, talk upon any other subject?
1861 L. L. Noble After Icebergs 195 It was light and tight, and ringy as a drum, and floated on the water like a bubble.
1901 R. A. Benedict Tam, Tom & Tim's Discuss. Free Trade 37 That remark of Tom's..is just as empty as a drum for us Americans.
1991 S. Cisneros Woman Hollering Creek 75 The landscape of your body taut as a drum.
2.
a. Chiefly Military. A person who plays a drum or drums; a drummer.
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society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > soldier with special duty > [noun] > signaller or musician
waitc1325
trumpeter1497
drum?1535
drum major1589
trumpettier1609
drum-major general1676
bugler1792
fife-major1802
pipe major1816
Bugle Major1844
signaller1845
bugle boy1848
trumpet-major1855
bugleman1859
bunting-tosser1905
buzzer1915
music1915
society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > instrumentalist > percussion player > [noun] > drummer
drumslade1513
swash-man1533
drum?1535
drumsler1541
drummer1574
drumster1581
swasher1600
drum man1645
drum boy1758
stick1909
skin-beater1936
?1535 Ordinances Watch & Ward Calais (Faust. E.vii) f. 89v Tenne porters..shall take wt them the phipher and the drome.
1599 J. Minsheu Pleasant Dialogues Spanish & Eng. 62/2 in R. Percyvall & J. Minsheu Spanish Gram. Tell the drum that he sound to set the watch.
a1627 T. Middleton Chast Mayd in Cheape-side (1630) iii. 37 Come along presently..,With two braue Drums and a Standert-bearer.
1691 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) II. 226 Our men..took prisoners..150 private soldiers, among whom were 6 sergeants..1 surgeon, and 3 drumms.
1740 C. Davies in Life & Adventures 22 The next Day a Drum of our Regiment went into a very dangerous Place to ease Nature.
1753 Scots Mag. Oct. 525/2 He was appointed Houshold-Drum to K. William and Q. Mary.
1835 J. Wilson Autobiogr. 95 (note) Amongst them [sc. horses]..was a grey one belonging to one of the drums.
1875 C. M. Yonge tr. A. O. le Harivel de Gonneville Recoll. Col. de Gonneville II. v. 274 The drums marched in front.
1926 E. Hemingway Sun also Rises xvii. 206 The drums marched ahead, and there was music on the fifes, and behind the men who carried the coffin walked the wife and two children.
1985 P. E. Daub Music Court George II (Ph.D diss., Cornell Univ.) vi. 215 They included the drums and oboes of the First and Second Troops of Horse Grenadier Guards, the trumpeters and kettledrummer of the Royal Regiment of Horse, and the oboes of the First Regiment of Foot Guards.
b. Military. A drummer, or a small party including a drummer, sent to communicate a message or parley with the enemy. Obsolete.Sometimes merely a contextual use of sense 2a.
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1577 R. Holinshed Chron. II. 1812/2 The Lord Lieutenant..sent a Drumme vnto Monsieur Doysell to signifie to him that his soldiours had gone further without theyr boundes.
1591 A. Colynet True Hist. Ciuill Warres France v. 297 They tooke such dreadfull feare, that without any shame they sent a Drumme to the said King.
1613 W. Shute tr. J. J. Orlers & H. van Haestens Triumphs of Nassau 118 They sent a drumme, who craued leaue that some of the Burgomasters might come and parley.
1695 T. Brown tr. J. Le Clerc Life Famous Cardinal-Duke de Richlieu I. ii. 238 They sent a Drum to demand permission to send back their Deputies to the King.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 165. ¶5 The Day after a Drum arrived at our Camp, with a Message.
1771 T. James Hist. Herculean Straits I. ii. iv. 314 He sent a drum to tell them, if they would give it up, the soldiers should have safe and honourable conditions.
1827 J. O'Driscol Hist. Ireland II. vii. 141 On arriving before Athlone, General Douglas sent a drum to summon the town.
3. A sound, often repetitive or sustained, resembling that of drumming.
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the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > repeated sound or succession of sounds > [noun] > regular or alternating rhythm > drumming
randana1661
rub-a-duba1661
drumming1663
row dow dow1701
rub-a-dub-dub1714
tattoo1755
rattan1764
drum1810
rataplan1846
kettledrumming1848
tom-tom1863
tattooing1871
tumming1882
tum1911
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > sound of instruments > [noun] > sound of drums
tuck of druma1500
dubc1572
dub-a-dub1582
tucking1632
drumming1663
beat1672
vellum thunder1716
rattan1764
hub a dub1777
drum1810
drum beat1817
tom-tomming1833
bum-bum1844
rataplan1846
tom-tom1863
tattooing1871
tumming1882
tan-tan1893
1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake i. 39 And the bittern sound his drum, Booming from the sedgy shallow.
1891 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Nov. 649/2 The drum of his wings as he trees.
1932 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald 2 Aug. 14/2 When he heard that drum of feet just about alongside he must have known it was Metcalfe in pursuit.
1964 Winnipeg Free Press 29 June 1/1 Residents of southeastern Manitoba were awakened today by the roll of thunder and the drum of rain.
2001 Condor 103 146/1 The drum of Black-backed Woodpeckers is significantly longer than Downy Woodpecker drums.
4. colloquial (Australian and New Zealand). With the. Reliable and pertinent information; a tip; warning. Cf. drum v.1 9.
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society > communication > information > [noun] > special or useful
hint1777
wrinkle1818
tip1845
hunch1849
the straight tip1871
kinklea1873
speech1874
quiff1881
pointer1884
griffin1889
griff1891
tip-off1901
rumble1905
wheeze1906
drum1915
1915 C. Drew & I. B. Evans Grafter 139 It beats me how the punters get the drum.
1945 L. Glassop We were Rats xvi. 88 I've got the drum from a friend in the Seventh Div. Headquarters in Melbourne. We're going to Bombay.
1960 S. H. Courtier Gently dust Corpse viii. 116 Ready to give me the drum about Cullerman yet?
1968 D. O'Grady Bottle of Sandwiches 7 Gave us the drum on where to get hold of the particular rifles we had our eyes on.
2008 Sunday Mail (Queensland) (Nexis) 24 Aug. (Discover section) 4 You get the drum on the bank robber who shinned up a tree to hide from the police but was betrayed by his dog.
II. Something resembling a drum or cylinder in shape, structure, or function.
5. The tympanic membrane, which separates the middle ear from the ear canal; = eardrum n. Also: the middle ear (now rare). Frequently in drum of the ear. Cf. tympanum n. 2a.
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the world > life > the body > sense organ > hearing organ > parts of hearing organ > [noun] > ear-drum
tympan1549
tabor1594
drum1615
tympanum1619
meninx1630
eardrum1708
middle ear1808
1615 H. Crooke Μικροκοσμογραϕια viii. xvii. 589 But it [sc. the membrane] may most properly bee called not the Tympane or drumme; but the membrane or head of the drumme, because it is stretched vpon the bony circle.
1645 S. Rutherford Tryal & Triumph of Faith v. 36 There's a carnosity on the Tympanium auris, the drum.
1696 tr. C. G. Le Clerc Compl. Surgeon 25 But the other part within the Drum advanceth to the Fenestra Ovalis, and is inserted in the hinder part of the Handle of the Malleus.
1713 G. Berkeley Three Dialogues Hylas & Philonous i. 20 Motion in the external Air..striking on the Drum of the Ear [printed Air], it causes a Vibration.
1766 J. Beattie Wolf & Shepherds in Poems Several Subj. 114 A Beau..With loud and everlasting clack, [will] beat your auditory drum.
1802 W. Paley Nat. Theol. iii. 47 The office of the drum of the ear is to spread out an extended surface, capable of receiving the impressions of sound.
1867 J. Tyndall Sound viii. 323 Across the cavity of the drum stretches a series of four little bones.
1882 G. W. Cox Little Cycl. Common Things 186/2 The air in the drum of the ear also helps also helps to carry the sound-waves.
1922 Laryngoscope 32 65 If, after 24 hours, there is still bulging of the drum and high temperature, one should not wait longer.
1960 D. C. Braungart & R. Buddeke Introd. Animal Biol. (ed. 5) xii. 175 The membrane, which resembles in function the drum of an ear, is connected with a small ganglion.
2003 A. L. Menner Pocket Guide Ear v. 53 The drum has good mobility and the hearing is near normal.
6. Any of various perciform fish constituting the family Sciaenidae, which are capable of making a repetitive drumming or croaking noise by vibrating their swim bladder; a sciaenid; also called croaker. Frequently with distinguishing word. Also with plural agreement: such fish collectively.red drum: see the first element.
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the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sciaenidae (drums) > [noun] > member of genus Pogonias
drummer1615
drum1649
tambour1854
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sciaenidae (drums) > [noun] > member of genus Haplodinotus
drummer1615
drum1649
sheep's head1676
bubbler1819
thunder-pumper1877
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sciaenidae (drums) > [noun] > genus Sciaena > sciaena ocellata (red drum)
bass1530
drummer1615
drum1649
red drum1709
drummer fish1725
red fish1763
red sciaena1803
red bass1837
spot1864
school bass1869
channel bass1873
spotfish1875
masooka1884
red horse1884
red1958
1649 Perfect Descr. Virginia 17 Fish are these in their kinde above Thirty sorts. 1 Codde. 2 Basse. 3 Drummes six foot long [etc.]
1676 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 11 624 There is another sort which the English call a Drum; many of which are two foot and a half or three foot long.
1714 J. Lawson Hist. Carolina 156 Black Drums are a thicker made Fish than the Red Drum.
1775 B. Romans Conc. Nat. Hist. E. & W. Florida 188 The roes of mullets and black drum.
1884 G. B. Goode in G. B. Goode et al. Fisheries U.S.: Sect. I iii. 360 In the Nassau River large Drum are taken with hook and line in the spring.
1918 J. T. Nichols Fishes Vicinity N.Y. City ii. 71 The Drum has very broad flat-crowned molar teeth on the bones of the throat.
1963 Daily Times-News (Burlington, N. Carolina) 19 Oct. 2 a/7 The fresh-water drum, sometimes erroneously called sheepshead, is one of our largest fresh-water species.
2004 K. Schultz Field Guide Freshwater Fish 112 Young drum feed on minute crustaceans.
7.
a. A sieve consisting of a fine mesh enclosed within a cylindrical frame; = drum sieve n. at Compounds 2. Obsolete. rare.
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the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > freedom from impurities > removal of impurities > sifting > [noun] > sieve
sievec725
riddereOE
hair-sievea1100
riddlelOE
sift1499
try?a1500
searcer1540
range-sieve1542
ranging sieve1548
cribble1565
cribe1570
screen1573
sifter1611
scryc1615
clensieve1623
cernicle1657
incernicle1657
ranch-sievea1665
duster1667
drum1702
fry1707
harp1788
lawn-sieve1804
trial1825
separator1830
lawn1853
shaker1906
chinois1937
microscreen1959
1702 J. K. tr. F. Massialot New Instr. Confectioners ii. 8 in Court & Country Cook A finer sieve call'd a Drum [Fr. tambour] must likewise be provided, to sift powder'd Sugar.
1824 Reg. Arts & Sci. 1 57 The operator is not annoyed by being powdered all over, nor the surrounding objects being covered with dust; the sifted powder being received at the bottom of the Drum.
b. A storm signal consisting of a cylinder of fabric suspended from a pole. Now historical.Invented by Robert Fitzroy in 1860 and commonly used in conjunction with a fabric cone which served to indicate wind direction; see cone n.1 9.
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the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > study or science of weather > [noun] > weather prediction > warning obtained by observation > signal exhibited > specific storm signals
storm-bell1837
drum1860
storm-cone1863
storm-drum1866
cone1875
storm flag1896
1860 Crosthwaite's Reg. Nov. 28/1 When the cone, which is suspended above the drum, has its point upwards, it signifies an expected gale from the north-east.
1875 Chambers's Jrnl. 2 Jan. 8/2 A drum, as well as a cone, is considered to denote a very heavy gale approaching from the direction indicated by the cone.
1917 Pop. Sci. Monthly Oct. 582/2 The drum, indicating winds of varying direction, has since been abandoned, and the British now use the cone alone.
2012 M. Walker Hist. Meteorol. Office iv. 86 The system of hoisting cones and drums..was superseded by electronic means of communicating storm warnings.
8. Architecture.
a. The body of the capital of a column in the Corinthian or Composite orders; = bell n.1 6a. Sometimes called vase or tambour.
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society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > column > [noun] > capital > parts of specific types of capital
caulis1563
helix1563
vase1563
voluta1563
cyllerie1592
codd1601
cilery1611
roll1611
turning1631
pillow1664
volute1696
tambour1706
collarino1715
annulet1728
colarin1728
drum1728
caulicoles1815
intervolute1831
bolster1842
stalk1842
horn1847
bell1848
cauliculusa1878
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. (at cited word) Vase, The Body of the Corinthian and Composite Capital; call'd also the Tambour, or Drum.
1831 Archaeologia 23 87 That part of the drum, on which the leaves are wrought, follows the cylindrical form of the column.
1897 Monumental News June 360/1 The drum of the capital is girded under the stem of the volutes by a molding.
1952 Jrnl. Rom. Stud. 42 26 A similar..double ring of acanthus leaves springs from the topmost zone to form the lower part of the composite capital, the drum of which..is spirally fluted.
2004 Jrnl. Rom. Stud. 94 117 The acanthus leaves on this column stop before the top of the lower drum, as also occurs on other examples in Alexandria.
b. A cylindrical or polygonal wall or pillar supporting a dome, cupola, lantern, etc.
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society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > pillar > [noun] > others
respoun1428
respond1448
twisted pillar1717
drum1805
responder1822
bundle pillar1842
Osiride pillar1850
trumeau1890
1805 J. Sansom Lett. from Europe I. x. 216 The drum of the Dome is ornamented by coupled pilasters.
1837 Penny Cycl. IX. 70/1 The height of the drum [of the Dome of S. Paul's] is 62 feet.
1926 Times 17 Nov. 11 The central hall was approached by a Corinthian portico, and surmounted by a shallow dome set upon a columned drum.
1985 Antioch Rev. 43 265 The dome..reached ninety-one feet above the base of its drum.
2001 Zeitschrift f. Kunstgeschichte 64 63/1 The drum is arbitrarily tall and as a result the lantern rises clear of the circling city walls.
c. A cylindrical block of stone forming one section of the shaft of a column.
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1861 E. A. Beaufort Egypt. Sepulchres II. xxiv. 320 Forty of these columns are still standing.., and the ground is strewed with their fallen drums.
1888 Jrnl. Hellenic Stud. 9 312 The drums of the shafts have twenty flutes, like those at Aegina.
1922 Stone Apr. 184/1 For the average column, even up to 24 feet or more in height of shaft, three drums will generally be found to work out best.
1974 Hesperia 42 143 It is easy to determine the diameter of a shaft provided that one can measure the distance between two adjacent arrises and that one knows how many flutes the drum had.
2005 D. Cruickshank Around World in 80 Treasures 238 The tall Doric columns of the peristyle are made from a number of solid marble drums, one standing on top of another.
d. A protruding structure on the face of a building for supporting the face of a clock. Obsolete.
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1883 Glasgow Weekly Herald 19 May 1/6 The console or drum, as our English clockmakers call the projection from the tower [to hold a clock face].
9. A drum-shaped component of a piece of mechanical or electrical equipment.
a. In various specific applications.
(a) A cylinder or barrel round which a belt passes or a rope, chain, etc., is wound, as in a winch.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > [noun] > cylinders
cylinder?a1560
drum1744
reel1791
reel1825
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > [noun] > other specific parts
armOE
button?1561
running gear1663
relax1676
collar1678
drumhead1698
long arm1717
drum1744
press cloth1745
head1785
absorber1789
bearing plate1794
crown1796
rhodings1805
press box1825
alternator1829
cushion1832
saw tooth1835
shoe1837
keyboard1839
returner1839
cross-head1844
channel shoe1845
baster1846
water port1864
shifter1869
magazine1873
entry port1874
upsetter1875
mechanism1876
tapper1876
tension bar1879
buttonholer1882
take-up1884
auger1886
instrument panel1897
balancer1904
torsion bar1937
powerhead1960
1744 J. T. Desaguliers Course Exper. Philos. II. xii. 418 By the Horses going round, the great Rope is wound about the Drum, and the Ram is drawn up.
1776 G. Semple Treat. Building in Water v. 36 The Spring that locks the Drum to the Shaft.
1858 D. Lardner Hand-bk. Nat. Philos.: Hydrostatics, Pneumatics, & Heat (new ed.) 111 [The rope] is carried two or three times round a large vertical drum erected near the well.
1922 Financial Times 11 May 6 The excess length of the rope is coiled upon the drum.
1960 Times 4 Oct. 7/6 He was twice whirled round the drum of the winch and then carried unconscious along the deck.
2008 Independent 24 May (Save & Spend section) 10/3 Slippage between the rope and the drums of a winch during the raising and lowering of a load quickly wears down the fibre.
(b) A rotating hollow cylindrical component in a washing machine, tumble dryer, etc., into which the washing is placed.
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the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing clothes and textile articles > [noun] > washing-machine > part of
washboard1845
drum1851
mangler1882
1851 London Jrnl. Arts, Sci., & Manuf. 39 184 Another rotary washing machine is exhibited by Mr. Nunn. It consists of a large drum, which is mounted upon a horizontal shaft.
1872 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Patents 1871 II. 561/1 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (42nd Congr., 2nd Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. 86) VIII A washing-machine provided with a drum capable of receiving the clothes to be washed, and having a revolving motion imparted to it by the action of a current of water discharging on it.
1913 Times 9 Apr. 21/2 The inner drum of the washing machine..makes only one revolution in each direction.
1972 Pop. Sci. Aug. 99/1 Rotation of the drum provides the tumbling.
2013 E. Unger-Pengilly Rat xii. 50 She poured some detergent into the drum of the washing machine.
(c) A detachable cylindrical magazine for (esp. automatic) firearms, in which ammunition is typically stored in a spiral arrangement (also more fully drum magazine); the contents of such a magazine.
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society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > feed-block of machine-gun > cartridge container
drum1870
1870 Engineering 23 Dec. 450/3 On the right of the drum is a locking arrangement for keeping it in position when not actually being fired.
1888 Cent. Mag. Oct. 887/1 The drum [of a Gatling gun] contains 102 cartridges.
1916 ‘B. Cable’ Action Front 198 Can you fill the cartridges into these drums while I shoot?
1942 Salt Lake Tribune 9 Jan. 2/5 One Australian fired a whole drum of submachine gun bullets into the general's body.
1960 W. H. B. Smith & J. E. Smith Small Arms of World (ed. 6) xxv. 371/1 This weapon..used a drum magazine and a bipod.
2012 Independent on Sunday 22 July 4/1 Particularly deadly was a 100-round drum magazine, which meant he would be able to fire 50 to 60 rounds per minute.
(d) Computing. A revolving cylinder having a magnetizable outer surface on which data is stored in the form of magnetized spots; = magnetic drum n. at magnetic adj. and n. Compounds; a drum memory. Now historical.memory drum: see the first element.
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society > computing and information technology > hardware > secondary storage > [noun] > magnetic > drum
memory drum1933
magnetic drum1946
drum1948
drum memory1952
1948 Math. Tables & Other Aids Computation 3 214 The latest memory device used in this machine is a rotating drum on which magnetic impulses representing the data are impressed.
1960 M. G. Say et al. Analogue & Digital Computers viii. 249 When the access time is of prime importance,..the diameter is small and the drum rotates at high speed.
1979 J. E. Rowley Mechanised In-house Information Syst. i. 64 Drums tend to be found only occasionally in information science applications..as they have a small capacity and are expensive as stores.
2005 E. G. Swedin & D. L. Ferro Computers iii. 58 The operating system of the Atlas swapped memory from its magnetic core memory to the drum and back.
b. In general use.Typically used of a cylindrical chamber in which a technical process takes place, or of a rotating cylindrical component.brake drum, mud drum, pulley drum, etc.: see the first element.
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1747 Gentleman's Mag. Nov. 526/2 A rotatory axis furnish'd with fans for making a wind, by turning in a drum, whence proceeds a pipe for conveying the wind to the fireplace of the furnace or oven.
1797 Ann. Agric. 28 102 All the beaters on the drum wheel [of a threshing mill]..extend in one line from end to end of the drum.
1877 Johnson's New Universal Cycl. I. 711/1 By enlarging the drum the capacity of the machine may be increased from one to twenty colors by adding to the number of rolls.
1899 H. A. Garratt Mod. Safety Bicycle viii. 190 The drum is usually fixed to the hub of the driving-wheel.
1920 Paper 15 Sept. 27/1 These spaces are successively brought into communication with a vacuum chest..at any desired point in the rotation of the drum.
1991 M. B. Spring Electronic Printing & Publishing iv. 76 In a laser printer, the image is painted onto the drum by a laser beam.
2006 H. Holik Handbk. Paper & Board iv. 187 Dewatering is governed by the differential head between the suspension level in the vat and the filtrate level inside the drum.
10. A large cylindrical container or receptacle in which various goods are stored or transported.
a. A box in which figs or other dried fruits are packed. Now historical.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > [noun] > cylindrical
drum1785
cylinder1791
gas cylinder1807
bottle1868
spill1895
1785 J. Bentham Let. 25 Nov. in Corr. (1971) III. 406 I have taken the liberty of addressing to your Lordship..a small specimen of each [type of Smyrna grape] contained in two drums, as they are called.
1830 R. Murray Commerc. Arithm. 83 6 drums of raisins, each weighing neat 64 lb.
1854 Q. Rev. Sept. 283 Squeezed into hurdles like figs into a drum.
1921 Jrnl. Illinois State Hist. Soc. 14 355 The boats from the South brought many of the luxuries of life to the shippers, as..drums of figs, boxes of blue layer raisins.
2009 S. Rockman Scraping By vi. 188 Daniel Crowl purchased two boxes of raisins and a drum of figs from William Grant.
b. A large tub in which cod are packed. Now historical.Commonly used in reference to the packing of cod for transportation from Newfoundland to overseas markets during the 19th and early 20th cent.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > tub > [noun] > large
soec1300
tankard1310
gimletc1391
standard1454
stander1459
knop1563
roof trough1665
ringe1720
drum1830
1830 F. G. Clarke Seaman's Man. 10 Drums of Cod Fish, at 4,00 per drum.
1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products 134/1 Drum... The large flat tubs in which fish are packed in New Brunswick for the Brazil markets are called drums; each drum contains exactly 128 lbs. of pressed codfish.
1929 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 1 Oct. 12/1 I saw a mule pulling a load of groceries up Slipe Road. The load consisted of two large drums of codfish, five bags of flour,..[etc.].
1973 A. Horwood Capt. H. Thomasen 45 The Sunner was chartered to take another load of drums and half drums of Newfoundland fish.
2000 A. Jessen in Trad. Occupations Indigenous & Tribal Peoples (Internat. Labour Office) ii. iv. 182 Women had to help with..working in the salt stores, packing the fish in drums, and collecting salt.
c. A sealed container in which liquid (esp. oil or, formerly, spirits) or powder is stored; a barrel or keg.oil drum: see the first element.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > barrel or cask > [noun]
barrelc1300
kovec1320
rubbour1362
bossc1375
rundlet1380
cade1387
kemp1391
cuve14..
keup1480
tonnel1483
colle?a1500
fostella1510
cap1519
firkett1523
cask1557
butt1572
botozio1622
rindell1640
drum1871
1871 Chem. News 5 May 209/2 It is advisable in all cases to add to each barrel or drum of boiled-oil a small proportion of raw oil.
1932 Financial Times 8 Aug. 7/6 This powder will then be shipped in drums.
1957 Times 8 Apr. 8/3 An oil store had been broken into and a 50-gallon drum of paraffin had been drained.
1983 Ukiah (Calif.) Daily Jrnl. 27 May 3/4 Six unexploded 55-gallon drums of gunpowder were found outside the building on the property.
2010 G. A. Chambers Race, Nation, & W. Indian Immigration to Honduras vi. 132 Mr. Bloomfield had been asked to move the drum of liquor from the scene of a fire.
2012 Anniston (Alabama) Star 22 Sept. 1/2 Workers shipped eight drums containing low levels of mercury to a hazardous waste landfill.
d. British slang. A tin or can in which tea is made or drunk. Now rare.Originally in the language of tramps. Cf. to drum up 2 at drum v.1 Phrasal verbs.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > preparation of drinks > [noun] > preparation of tea > utensils
tea-kettle1705
tea-pot1705
maté1717
kitchen1721
tea-kitchen1770
urn1781
tea-urn1786
quart pot1806
tea-maker1814
sukey1823
samovar1830
billy1839
tea-boiler1839
billy-can1885
tea infuser1889
tea-can1890
tea-billy1894
tea ball1895
dixie1900
caddy-spoon1927
drum1931
Teasmade1938
tea machine1963
1910 Manch. Guardian 15 July 14/1 The ‘drum’ is the tramp's tin can in which he makes his tea.
1931 F. Gray Tramp ix. 104 He will bring his ‘billy-can’ or ‘drum’ to the door of a cottage or mansion and beg a little hot water to make his tea.
1970 F. McKenna Gloss. Railwaymen's Talk 35 Drum, a tea-can.
11. Zoology. A resonant organ or structure which enables certain animals to produce a loud sound; spec. (a) the timbale of a cicada; (b) the hyoid bone of a howler monkey. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1817 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. II. xxiv. 401 This apparatus so much resembles the drum of the Cicadæ, that there can be little doubt as to its use.
1847 W. B. Carpenter Zool.: Systematic Acct. I. §159 The howling Monkeys are distinguished..by the dilatation of the os hyoides into a hollow drum, which communicates with the larynx.
1877 Pop. Sci. Rev. 16 364 After having been excited by its motor muscle, the drum returns to its state of rest by virtue of its elasticity.
1910 M. B. Beebe & C. W. Beebe Our Search for Wilderness 326 The hyoid bones in the throat are enlarged to form a great thin-walled bony drum, which is the chief instrument in the production of their wonderful voice.
1953 Sci. News Let. 9 May 300/1 He [sc. a cicada] makes his 'song' by vibrating two little ear-like drums located on the sides of the basal part of his abdomen.
12. A cylindrical or nearly cylindrical portion of the body of a vase or similar vessel. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1856 J. C. Robinson Catal. Soulages Coll. i. 48 The body or drum of the vase is grounded in gold and ruby lustre.
1871 Jrnl. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc. 27 530 There was one fragment of peculiar interest, from the neat chevron wreath which surrounded the drum of the vessel.
1899 Country Life Illustr. 15 July 42/1 The drum of a vase..is comparatively easy to make.
1972 Burlington Mag. Dec. 874/1 The drum of the vase is ornamented with reliefs of Bacchic figures.
13. slang (Australian and New Zealand). The bundle of possessions carried by an itinerant worker or vagrant; = swag n.1 10. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > a journey > [noun] > equipment for a journey > baggage
trousseauc1230
harnessc1330
fardel1388
flittinga1400
stuff?a1400
baggagec1430
trussellc1440
carriagec1450
trussagec1500
traffic1538
trussery1548
traffe1566
sumpture1567
truss1587
needment1590
luggage1596
sumptery1620
piece1809
traps1813
roll-up1831
dunnage1834
kit1834
way baggage1836
swag1853
drum1861
swag bag1892
1861 Newcastle (Austral.) Chron. 16 Feb. 4/2 Their being content to trudge about the country with their 'drums' upon their backs rather than tackle the pick and shovel in good earnest.
1889 M. Ross Compl. Guide Lakes Central Otago 44 ‘Time's up!’ is called, the ‘drum’ (the local for swag) hoisted on, and the final ascent begins.
1954 Bulletin (Sydney) 16 June 12/4 Pack-horse is the accepted mode of swag-transport up there, and the swag has more individuality than any back-humped drum.
14. The round body of a banjo.
ΚΠ
?1865 H. L. Williams Deaf—in Horn 5 (stage direction) Takes from bag the drum part of a banjo and screws handle to it.
1889 Pall Mall Gaz. 24 Jan. 7/1 The best length is twenty-seven inches from nut to drum.
1912 Telephone News 15 June 11/1 A banjo string..being connected to the drum or parchment stretched over the frame.
2005 S. Griffin & E. Thompson Bluegrass Guitar 26 Next was a banjo his father made for him when he was 11, the material for the banjo's drum or head being provided by his grandmother's late cat.

Phrases

P1. by the drum: publicly; by public proclamation; esp. in the form to sell by the drum: to sell by public auction. Cf. sense 1b. Obsolete.
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society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > [adverb]
outa1400
notoirely1409
notorily1455
notoriouslyc1495
famously1553
by the drum1564
1564 A. Golding tr. Justinus Hist. Trogus Pompeius xxxiv. f. 134 Al the people were sold by the drum [L. Populus omnis sub corona uenditur], to the entent that by the ensample therof, the other cities myghte be a fraid to make any trouble or insurrection.
?1575 E. Hellowes tr. A. de Guevara Familiar Epist. (new ed.) 388 Vnto him that offred most siluer..the priesthood was giuen: as when a garment is sold by the drumme [Sp. en el almoneda].
1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) ix. liii. 241 Saintish, not in Deede, but by the Dromme.
1601 F. Godwin Catal. Bishops of Eng. 32 He..was woont to sell all other ecclesiastical promotions as it were by the drum.
1665 S. Clarke Life & Death Julius Cæsar 60 The Triumviri caused the goods of the Proscripts to be sold by the Drum, at such prizes as the Souldiers pleased.
P2. to follow the drum: to be a soldier; (also) to accompany the army, to be a camp follower.
ΚΠ
1575 G. Gascoigne Fruites of Warre iii, in Posies sig. b.j I meane to tell what race they ronne, Who followe Drummes before they knowe the dubbe.
?a1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 197 As when I us'd in scarlet to follow a drum.
1941 R. Graves Proceed, Sergeant Lamb i. 8 A soldier's wife of the tough breed, who had followed the drum for thirty years.
2008 Worcester News (Nexis) 16 June He delights in..sleeping under the stars, perhaps rekindling the memories of the days when he followed the drum.
P3. Tom (also Jack, John) Drum's entertainment (also Drum's entertainment) and variants: an unwelcoming or hostile reception. Frequently implying the act of forcibly driving someone away. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > discourtesy > [noun] > unpleasant greeting or welcome
welcome1548
Jack Drum's entertainment1577
unwelcoming1838
sneck posset1876
the frozen mitt1903
unwelcome1912
1577 R. Stanyhurst Treat. Descr. Irelande iii. f. 10/1, in R. Holinshed Chron. I Tom Drum his entertaynment, which is, to bale a man in by the heade, and thrust him out by both the shoulders.
1579 S. Gosson Schoole of Abuse f. 4 Plato..gaue them all Drummes entertainment, not suffering them once to shew their faces in a reformed common wealth.
1603 H. Crosse Vertues Common-wealth sig. L2 If his backe be poore..and hath neither money nor friends, he shall haue Tom Drums entertainment.
1612 J. Taylor Laugh & be Fat 42 Not like the entertainment of Iacke Drum, Who was best welcome when he went his way.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) iii. vi. 39 If you giue him not Iohn drummes entertainement. View more context for this quotation
?c1685 Youngmans Careless Wooing (single sheet) Thy Entertainment shall be like Iack Drum.
1819 W. Scott Let. 4 Apr. (1933) V. 337 They have had Tom Drum's Entertainment, for I have been seized with one or two successive crises of my cruel malady.
1831 R. Southey in J. Jones Attempts in Verse 48 It had been a wet and windy day, and meeting with something like Tom Drum's entertainment from the hostess..they were fain to hobble seven miles more.
1884 C. G. Leland Algonquin Legends New Eng. 371 The enemy had well-nigh made Jack Drum's entertainment for them.
P4. to beat (also bang, sound, etc.) the (big) drum (also drums): to direct attention to or promote something enthusiastically, often with the intention of attracting support for a particular cause or opinion.
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society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > advertising > types or methods of advertising > [verb (intransitive)] > advertise ostentatiously or extravagantly
to beat the drum1611
1611 T. Middleton & T. Dekker Roaring Girle sig. Gv What need you sir To beate the drumme of my wifes infamy.
1786 New Ann. Reg. 1785 Public Papers 178/1 Let not every man, who thinks proper to beat on the spirit-stirring drum of the constitution, make you start and tremble.
1887 Gentleman's Mag. Jan. 69 The quid pro quo system, ‘You beat the big drum for me in England, and I'll do the same for you in the States’.
1894 Evening News (London) 25 May 2/4 In spite of the care taken on both sides to avoid blowing the whistle and banging the drum of international fraternisation, something of a national flavour crept into the movement.
1907 Q. Rev. Apr. 393 It was left to the Navy League to thump the big drum.
1967 Boston Sunday Herald 26 Mar. 1. 30/3 The second big objection to the Weston proposal is that it involves a flagrant violation of the home rule principle for which the reform element has beaten the drums so loudly in recent years.
2006 Wine & Spirits Q. Winter 19/1 ‘Wine publications have been beating the drum on Spain,’ says Marc Hazur, specialty purchasing supervisor.
P5. drum and trumpet (also trumpet and drum): attributive designating an account or story that focuses upon military matters and heroic deeds to the virtual exclusion of everything else; (esp. of history) characterized by this approach.
ΚΠ
1777 M. Morgann Ess. Dramatic Char. Falstaff 49 A name for ever dishonoured by a frequent exposure in that Drum-and-trumpet Thing called The first part of Henry VI.
1867 Sat. Rev. 13 Apr. 471/1 We are, of course, far from classing the History of the Norman Conquest with the mere ‘drum and trumpet histories’ which Dr. Shirley so pungently denounced.
1875 Daily Evening Bull. (San Francisco) 14 Aug. 1/1 It is history after the style of Macaulay, not a ‘drum and trumpet story’.
1907 Times Lit. Suppl. 19 Dec. 390/2 We find..that politics ardently pursued tend to dwarf and annihilate private affairs, that it is all ‘drum and trumpet’ fiction.
1988 Internat. Jrnl. Afr. Hist. Stud. 21 729 The author veers away from the ‘trumpet and drum’ history that is most popular among Nigerian historians.
2006 T. Cook Clio's Warriors vi. 219 These were, then, more than ‘drum and trumpet’ accounts or examples of vainglorious chest thumping.
P6. drum-and-fife: attributive designating hardline or militant supporters of something. Cf. fife and drum at fife n. 1c. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1877 New Q. Mag. Apr. 3 If we stand at middle distance between the inveterate opponents and the drum-and-fife supporters of Comedy.
1899 Westm. Gaz. 14 Dec. 3/2 They are both drum-and-fife supporters of their particular views.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive, as drum call, drum dance, drum skin, drum solo, etc.
ΚΠ
1736 tr. P. J. von Strahlenberg Histori-geogr. Descr. N. & E. Europe & Asia 334 Drums..which are described Tab. VI. Letters C. and D. with a wooden Ladle, which serves for a Drum-Stick; E. is the Drum-Skin, and F. the Handle.
1775 G. Washington Gen. Orders 1 Dec. in Papers (1987) Revolutionary War Ser. II. 465 It is..ordered..that no Non Commissioned Officer or Soldier, do presume..to be out of Drum-call of his Alarm post.
1788 J. Walker Elements Geogr. iii. vii. 130 They are governed rather by manners than by laws; and their drum dances supply every want of political institutions.
1829 Standard 1 Apr. The conversion at the drum tap.
1848 Spectator 25 Nov. 1145/1 (advt.) The ‘Army’ Quadrille, and the new ‘Drum’ Polka, every Night until Further Notice.
1863 W. Smith Dict. Bible III. 1413/1 The ‘tabour’ or ‘tabor’ was a musical instrument of the drum-type.
1899 C. L. Norton Queen's Rangers iii. 38 Don't you remember you're no longer in the King's service, and you need not bother your head about the drum calls any more?
1962 Jazz Monthly Oct. 24 Folk Forms is reduced to a short bass solo, a short drum solo and a ride-out.
1984 Electronics & Mus. Maker Mar. 24/3 The generally high quality of the sampled drum sounds.
1995 Classic CD July 67/3 I loved cellist Michel Poulet's quirky drum taps, with snares patently on.
2000 Up Here (Yellowknife, N.W. Territories) Apr. 10/3 The local Inuit entertained the ships' 70 tourists wonderfully with drum dances and athletic games.
2006 T. Gioia Healing Songs x. 158 Among the Siberian shamans, the drum skin usually came from an elk, reindeer, or horse.
b. attributive. Resembling a drum, of the shape of a drum; having a part shaped like a drum.
drum armature n. Electrical Engineering
ΚΠ
?1873 Cassell's Techn. Educator IV. 210 In a drum armature this source of loss is eliminated by the wires all passing along the exterior of the core.
1924 Sci. Monthly Sept. 295 The drum armature now almost exclusively employed was invented in 1972..and gradually displaced the ring armature.
2013 R. P. Roess & G. Sansone Wheels that Drove N.Y. iii. 49 When wound on a drum armature, electric current is produced when the drum is made to revolve.
drum capstan n.
ΚΠ
1695 S. Morland Urim of Conscience 33 A Drum-Capstan (a Contrivance I presented to the late King Charles the Second, many years ago).
1763 H. Walpole Vertue's Anecd. Painting III. ii. 84 He [sc. Sir S. Morland] invented the drumcap-stands for weighing heavy anchors.
1997 M. C. Biskeborn in F. E. Froelich & A. Kent Encycl. Telecommunications XIV. 29 Drum capstans require several turns of cable to develop adequate restraining friction.
drum curb n. [curb n. 10]
ΚΠ
1844 F. W. Simms Pract. Tunnelling iv. 47 There are various opinions as to the advantages derived from the use of barrel or drum curbs.
1906 Archit. Mag. Mar. 95/1 Provide a circular drum curb 7 ft. high of elm.
drum net n.
ΚΠ
1766 R. Brookes Art of Angling (new ed.) 175 They [sc. tench] are very easily caught either with Draft-apron or Drum-net.
1814 R. Southey in Q. Rev. 12 185 Daffodils or any bright yellow flowers will decoy perch into a drum-net.
2011 A. Robb Black Dog Daze v. 43 I don't think there was an occasion when we pulled in the drum net and didn't find it half full of many different types of fish.
drum printer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > hardware > peripherals > [noun] > printer
colour printer1869
drum printer1913
printer1946
1913 Packages Dec. 70/3 (advt.) One single drum printer and Matthews type. One standard Loury wiring machine.
1989 J. Gatenby GCSE Computer Stud. iii. 48 The barrel or drum printer is also a line printer.
2002 News-Jrnl. (Daytona Beach, Florida) (Nexis) 13 Dec. a1 The images are transferred by CD-ROM to an Iris drum printer.
drum pulley n.
ΚΠ
1813 J. Farey Gen. View Agric. Derbyshire II. v. 51 The strap-drum for working the drum pulley M, and the rope-pulley for working the rake-pulley L, are fixed on a horizontal axis of the Water-mill Geer.
1922 Pop. Mech. Apr. 628/1 A long straight drum pulley on the overhead shaft will be needed.
2013 U.S. Patent 8,441,141 B1 3 The first and second pulleys..may be drum pulleys.
drum sander n.
ΚΠ
1884 Amer. Jrnl. Railway Appliances 15 Dec. (advt.) 297/1 Double drum sander.]
1889 Building Age June 125/3 (heading) Combined disk and drum sander.
1950 Pop. Sci. Oct. 284 With the five expanding-type drums in this 15-piece drum sander set you can sand in corners.
2006 Good Woodworking June 65/1 Penny chose an Axminster drum sander... When we visit, she is using it to fine-thickness some bubinga to inlay in the legs of an altar she's been commissioned to make.
drum scanner n.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > hardware > peripherals > [noun] > scanner
drum scanner1928
optical character reader1962
optical scanner1962
wand1978
1928 Sci. News-Lett. 21 Sept. 181/3 The fundamentals of all [radiovision] systems are the same—only the mechanisms differ. And but two methods are employed, i.e., the disc scanner and the drum scanner.
1992 MacUser Nov. 2/2 We tested six desktop color slide scanners to reveal that you can get drum-scanner quality for less than a tenth of drum-scanner cost.
2011 Jordan Times (Nexis) 26 Aug. When a client gave me a rather large painting to scan, I first thought of going to someone who had a scanner with a larger flatbed, or to a printing press that uses what is called a drum scanner.
drum shaft n.
ΚΠ
1796 R. Fulton Treat. Improvem. Canal Navigation ix. 71 The shaft of this wheel..has two wheels of different diameters; two of different diameters are also on the drum shaft.
1921 Coal Age 26 May 942/2 For the electric operation of this hoist a geared motor drive was built and connected to one end of the drum shaft.
2008 J. T. Bauman Fatigue, Stress & Strain Rubber Components iv. 53 Strain is taken as the change in displacement of drum shafts divided by the original shaft separation.
c. Objective.
drum maker n.
ΚΠ
1649 Last Will & Test. R. Brandon 8 There is one Tench a Drum-maker in Hounsditch, that provided roapes, pullies, and hookes (in case the King resisted) to compel and force him down to the block.
a1823 W. Combe Lett. Amelia & Mother (1824) v. 65 The two pretty girls..are the daughters of a drum maker.
2011 Orange County (Calif.) Reg. 28 Oct. 17/4 A set of wood drums made by George's older brother, Paul, a world-class drum maker.
drum player n.
ΚΠ
1572 J. Higgins Huloets Dict. (rev. ed.) sig. Oviv Drumme player... Tympanista... Ioueur de tabourin.
1841 Examiner 13 June 380/1 Of every member of the orchestra, from Mr Callcott, the leader, to the drum-player, the loss has been general.
1993 Osho Everyday Meditator 167/2 The drum player will go on checking his drum—whether it is perfect or not.
d. Similative.
drum-shaped adj.
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1799 tr. Laboratory (ed. 6) I. xi. 374 Mix them intimately, by sifting them through a drum-shaped lawn sieve.
1913 ‘R. Dehan’ Headquarter Recruit iv. 48 A drum-shaped air-box of india-rubbered canvas.
2006 V. Smil Transforming 20th Cent. iv. 159 The technique uses large drum-shaped shearers that move down the length of a coal face.
C2.
drum-beater n. (a) a person who beats a drum; (b) figurative (originally) a proponent of going to war; (more generally) a vehement supporter of a cause, idea, product, etc.; (c) an implement used to beat a drum, esp. a stick with a padded end.
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1704 Athenian Oracle III. 423/1 The Drum-beaters usually held their Drums before them, which on advancing to the Attacks, proved extraordinary good Armour.
1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xiii. 129 Earning their money, if ever men did, especially the drum-beaters, who were very muscular.
1916 Christian Workers Mag. July 829 The truth lies between the drum beaters on the one side and the puling pacifists on the other.
1942 H. K. Smith Last Train from Berlin iv. 83 Repeated protestations are a sign the drum-beater doesn't quite believe his own case.
1970 E. Tooker Iroquois Ceremonial of Midwinter i. 28 A single, simply carved wooden stick is used as a drum beater.
2005 T. Marx Contemp. Western Design 123 The drum beater is made from an elk bone.
2008 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 1 June (Week in Review section) 12/5 He didn't just cast a vote but was a drumbeater for the propaganda.
drum-beating n. and adj. (a) n. the beating of a drum or drums; figurative the action of drawing public attention to something; enthusiasm, vehement support (cf. to beat the drum at Phrases 4); (b) adj. that beats a drum or drums; figurative enthusiastic, showing vehement support.
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1639 R. Ward Animadversions of Warre i. x. lxiii. 197 Hee [sc. the Serjeant] is every night at Drum-beating to draw Billets for his Guard.
1858 ‘Late Capt. of Infantry’ Hints bearing on U.S. Army i. 7 A rumbling, bugle-blowing, drum-beating town, passing through their country on wheels, at the speed of a loaded wagon.
1893 Athenæum 18 Nov. 697/3 It is time the drum-beating about the deadly peril of the exploit is estimated at that true value my brother..assigned to it.
1980 Washington Post 8 Dec. a1/1 America's pilot Job Corps center opened to drumbeating media coverage and predictions of sweeping triumph.
2009 Independent 8 Aug. (Mag.) 42/1 The Wellingtonia..was the big new discovery of the 1850s, the wollemi pine of its day, introduced with just as much fanfare and drum-beating.
drum boy n. now historical and rare a military drummer.A drummer in the military was formerly often a boy not considered old enough to serve as a regular soldier.
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > instrumentalist > percussion player > [noun] > drummer
drumslade1513
swash-man1533
drum?1535
drumsler1541
drummer1574
drumster1581
swasher1600
drum man1645
drum boy1758
stick1909
skin-beater1936
1758 London Mag. Sept. 459/2 One shilling a day the whole year to every serjeant; and six-pence a day..to every drum boy.
1836 M. B. Honan Court & Camp Don Carlos xi. 98 I must say, the poor drum-boys were badly clad, and their garments were of various colours.
1935 Chicago Defender 9 Mar. 13/6 Serving in every office from drum boy to Captain, he was later discharged in 1919 as captain.
drum brake n. a brake in which the brake shoes are housed within a brake drum.
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society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > vehicles according to means of motion > vehicle moving on wheels > [noun] > parts of vehicle moving on wheels > devices to retard or stop motion > brake or braking apparatus > types of
handbrake1841
rubber1850
air brake1857
disc brake1865
power brake1865
hydraulic brake1874
vacuum-brake1875
rim brake1876
drum brake1882
sand brakea1884
calliper brake1904
rheostatic brake1920
callipers1972
1882 Eng. Mech. 22 Dec. 366/3 From what I could glean about drum-brakes for dog-carts..it seems to me that the drum is fixed on the axle by the side of the wheel.
1899 Motor-car Jrnl. 19 May 168/1 Stronger springs have also been fitted to all vehicles, and the rim brakes previously adopted re-inforced by band or drum brakes.
1950 K. Newton & W. Steeds Motor Vehicle (ed. 4) xxvii. 470 The vast majority of brakes are friction brakes and these may be sub-divided into: (1) Drum brakes and (2) Disc brakes.
2010 Independent on Sunday 1 Aug. 16/1 It's got drum brakes, so if it rains it doesn't really affect it.
drum break n. originally Jazz a drum solo; (now also) a sampled section of a rhythm track (cf. breakbeat n. 1).
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1937 Gramophone Oct. 215/2 Shaw's clarinet and Pastor's tenor are features of the first title. The second runs off the rails a bit in the somewhat demodé idea of a stop chorus to allow for drum breaks.
1982 N.Y. Rocker Jan. 27/1 While Pete was doing conventional blend-mixing..Cool ‘DJ’ Herc was using the drum breaks that Flash liked, recueing them over and over.
1998 G. Giddins Visions of Jazz 159 Goodman modified the tempo..and reduced the climax to a two-bar drum break by Gene Krupa.
2007 Future Music Feb. 60/5 So standard drum breaks were now being ‘pitchshifted’; the glitchiness of the time-stretching gave a new ‘pitched’ element to the drum breaks.
drum camera n. a camera in which the film is held on the surface of a rotating drum.
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1909 Electrician 1 Jan. 471/1 Mr. G. W. Worrall's letter with regard to the rotating drum camera used in conjunction with the Duddell oscillograph.
2002 G. Saxby Sci. Imaging viii. 98 In a drum camera the film is fixed to the drum as before, but the drum itself rotates.
drum circle n. (a) a group of North American Indian drummers who sit in a circle and beat a single drum using drum beaters; (b) originally U.S. a group of drummers sitting or standing in a circle playing drums (esp. hand drums) together in a unified rhythm; an event involving this, esp. as an activity viewed as having a spiritual or mystical aspect.
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1967 Navajo Times (Window Rock, Arizona) 8 June 13/3 The Drum circle was headed by Ralph Zotigh, a Kiowa, which included some of the finest Chanters of the Taos, Cheyenne, Chippewa and Navajo.
1983 C. Vecsey Trad. Ojibwa Relig. 117 He sat in the drum circle and gave a long speech.
1992 USA Today (Nexis) 18 Feb. 1 d The event will benefit the Rhythm for Life Project, which promotes drum circles as a form of communication and healing.
2006 Hoosier Times (Bloomington, Indiana) 25 June (Herald-Times ed.) a8/2 In a shamanic drum circle, all the members keep a monotonous drum beat intended to help them reach an altered state of consciousness.
2014 Tampa Bay (Florida) Times (Nexis) 15 Aug. 1 City commissioners seem reluctant to allow another drum circle on the beaches.
drum clock n. (a) a suspended drum which is struck as a signal or alarm (obsolete rare); (b) a clock in which the mechanism is enclosed in a cylindrical case.
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1791 Literary Mag. & Brit. Rev. Sept. 199/2 The guards..gave notice by their drum clocks, of the approach of the Moors.
1858 Morning News (London) 13 Nov. 4/5 A drum clock and a perambulator were not his, the latter having been given by one of his daughters to another one.
1913 E. Davies Widow's Necklace 8 An American drum clock ticked noisily.
1991 M. L. Myers French Archit. & Ornamental Drawings 17th Cent. 203 It is a drum clock that is set in a corbeled, upright, rectangular gilt-bronze case.
drum corps n. originally North American (a) a division or unit of an army who march and play drums, esp. as part of ceremonial duties; (b) a marching band or similar group, playing brass and percussion instruments and accompanied by performers who do set routines with batons, flags, etc., to the music, esp. in competitions or parades.
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1855 Spirit of Times 3 Nov. 445/1 Later in the evening, the French Drum Corps complimented Colonel Chickering with a fine serenade at his residence in Beacon-street.
1965 N.Y. Amsterdam News 21 Aug. 36 An estimated crowd of 1,200 watched various drum corps as they participated in the 3rd Annual Drum Corps Night.
2006 C. Tate et al. Am I Bovvered? 1st Ser. Episode 3. 70 Bunty: Drum corps? Are you serious? Geoff: They're doing very well in the regionals, and I just bumped into Douggie Hicks last night. He's in dire need of twirlers.
2007 Daily Mirror (Nexis) 3 May 20 The Territorial Army..regiment..is looking to reinstate its drum corps.
drum cover n. Entomology Obsolete rare a structure which in certain species of cicada partly or fully covers the timbale.
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1817 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. II. xxiv. 405 The drum-covers or opercula [of the cicada] from beneath which the sound issues.
1886 Jrnl. Asiatic Soc. Bengal 55 ii. 157 The tegmina are broadly wrinkled and the drum covers..are small.
drum drying n. an industrial process in which a substance to be dried or dehydrated is pumped as slurry or solid fragments over a heated revolving drum, the dried material afterwards being scraped off.
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1894 J. Lister Cotton Manuf. xviii. 210 There are drum-drying, tentering, and other machines, hot-air chambers, and open-air drying.
1947 Econ. Bot. 1 284 Tray drying was found best for flour and cereals, drum drying for beverage powders.
2013 P. Schuck in G. Smithers & M. A. Augustin Adv. in Dairy Ingredients i. 11 Generally, drum drying has a number of serious disadvantages compared with spray drying.
drumfire n. continuous and rapid artillery fire; frequently figurative. [Apparently after German Trommelfeuer (July 1915 or earlier); quot. 1915 is from an article by a U.S. war correspondent who observed the battle from the German side.]
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1915 N.Y. Times 27 June 2/1 To the left, toward Ecurie, the artillery duel is fiercest. A nerve-shattering ‘drum fire’ is on.
1918 Washington Post 2 July 5/2 Playgoers who have been trained this season under the drum-fire of thinly-camouflaged salaciousness will accept even these examples of the double-entendre without flinching.
1955 Bull. Atomic Scientists Mar. 98/3 We expose ourselves quite unnecessarily to a drumfire of criticism.
1993 I. M. Banks Against Dark Background 349 The helicopter came swinging round the peninsula, its engine-voice rattling like drumfire.
2009 H. J. Teuteberg in D. J. Oddy et al. Rise of Obesity in Europe vi. 77 The drumfire of modern advertising is said to be one of the causes of an excessive, unhealthy consumption of food.
drum-fish-line n. Obsolete rare a fishing line similar to a drum line (drum line n. (a)) but greater in length and having lighter sinkers.
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1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship I. 64 Drum-lines, for drums, have 16 threads... Drum-fish-line has 9 threads.
drum-hole n. Obsolete rare a soundhole in the side of a drum with two heads.
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1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §142 In Drums, the Closenesse round about..maketh the Noise come forth at the Drum-hole, far more loud, and strong, than if you should strike upon the like Skin, extended in the Open Aire.
drum kit n. a collection of drums, cymbals, and other percussion instruments arranged so that they may be played by one person, typically from a seated position.
ΚΠ
1934 in E. Little Mod. Rhythmic Drumming (rear cover) (advt.) ‘Ajax’ Drum Kit.
1965 G. Melly Owning-up v. 47 There were always a great many very steep steps to drag the drum kit up.
1999 D. Haslam Manchester, Eng. vi. 151 Taking the creative cutting edge of music well away from rock artists wedded to their guitars and drum kits.
drum line n. (a) a line used for catching drum fish, typically long and using multiple hooks and lead sinkers; (b) a baited line attached to a moored flotation device which has the shape of a cylinder.
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1767 G. Washington Invoice 20 July in Papers (1993) VIII. 12 6 Cords of Drum Line.
1867 Athenæum No. 2085. 458/2 A tie of triple drum line.
1966 P. Pinney Restless Men x. 188 ‘That's supposed to anchor a drumline’,..‘How the hell do they expect it to hold a tonne of fighting shark?’
1986 S. Tate Bring me Duck 31 A drum line was made of 50 yards of #24 white cotton twine, and it had eight 2-ounce net leads for a sinker and two 9 or 10-0 hooks on it.
2013 Sunday Times (Johannesburg) (Nexis) 1 Sept. Making more use of drum lines—floating fishing lines with large baited hooks—to catch large sharks.
drum machine n. a programmable electronic device for reproducing the sounds of drums and other percussion instruments, from which rhythms can be created.
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > other musical instruments > [noun] > electronic > electronic effects and devices
tremolo1959
trem arm1961
tremolo arm1961
fuzzbox1964
wah-wah1968
wah-wah pedal1969
voice1970
phasera1974
patch1975
sequencer1975
drum machine1976
flanger1979
pitchbend1982
beat-box1983
MIDI1983
1976 Beat Instrumental & Internat. Recording Studio Apr. 73/2 Quite a lot of good disco records are being made with drum machines!
2012 Church Times 31 Aug. (Suppl.) 9/2 The keyboard player accidentally switched on the drum machine for a few seconds.
drum man n. a man who plays a drum or drums.
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > instrumentalist > percussion player > [noun] > drummer
drumslade1513
swash-man1533
drum?1535
drumsler1541
drummer1574
drumster1581
swasher1600
drum man1645
drum boy1758
stick1909
skin-beater1936
1645 R. Baillie Let. 4 May (1775) II. 104 I believe, upon the tuck of drum men would be gotten, if the great necessity were demonstrated.
1811 J. Parkins Young Man's Best Compan. 578 The drum-major has the command of all the drum-men.
2003 F. J. Korom Hosay Trinidad v. 162 The drum men prepare for the musical accompaniment through construction of the drums and drumming practice sessions.
drum memory n. Computing (now historical) a data storage device consisting of a rotating cylinder with a magnetizable outer surface on which the data can be stored; (as a mass noun) storage capacity or facilities of this type.
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society > computing and information technology > hardware > secondary storage > [noun] > magnetic > drum
memory drum1933
magnetic drum1946
drum1948
drum memory1952
1952 Proc. Electronic Computer Symp. (Inst. Radio Engineers) ii. 1 A drum memory, as contrasted with an electrostatic memory, may have an extremely large capacity.
1970 O. Dopping Computers & Data Processing x. 145 Nowadays, the drum memory is normally a secondary memory.
2012 M. S. Malone Guardian all Things ix. 205 Drum memory barely matched the capacity of magnetic tape, and its access times were much slower than core memory.
drum pad n. (a) a rolled pad of animal skin used as a hand drum (rare); (b) a pad or other flat surface used for practising drumming; a practice pad; (c) an electronic device with one or more flat pads which imitate the sounds of a drum kit when struck.
ΚΠ
1947 Oceania 17 347 As the men danced, the women, sitting in a row before the audience, were beating their drum-pads.
1955 H. W. Bicknell Handbk. Student Teachers of Exploratory Instrumental Music Classes (Diss. Univ. Southern Calif.) 56 The children..have been learning how to hold the snare drum sticks in the left and right hand and how to produce a good tone with correct technique on a drum pad.
1980 Music Jrnl. 1 Mar. 40/2 The new model is said to incorporate a thinner, denser drum pad to allow increased dynamics and a better ‘hit’ response.
1998 A. Fadiman Ex Libris (2000) 35 When my friend the art historian was a teenager, his cherished copy of D'Aulair's Book of Greek Myths served as a drum pad on which he practiced percussion riffs from Led Zeppelin.
2002 T. Verderosa Techno Primer iii. 135 Sometimes we..just trigger sounds and loops off of keyboards and drum pads from our samplers.
drum plotter n. now chiefly historical a computer plotter in which the paper moves on a revolving drum, the writing being done by a pen that moves from side to side across it; cf. plotter n. 2c.
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society > computing and information technology > hardware > peripherals > [noun] > printer > plotter
plotter1956
drum plotter1965
1965 Instruments & Control Syst. July 195/2 Flatbed digital plotter... New Model 502 Digital Incremental Plotter..is flatbed version of drum plotter series.
1986 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 20 Apr. iii. 15/1 The second type of plotter is the roller-bed variety. In this update of the old drum plotter, the paper lies flat instead of being wrapped around a cylinder.
2014 Columbian (Vancouver, Washington) (Nexis) 11 June a6 A task that could be done in one week by one engineer (with a big computer program and a drum plotter).
drum ring n. (a) Anatomy and Zoology the bony ring to which the tympanic membrane is attached; cf. tympanic ring at tympanic adj. 1a; (b) a circular ring around something drum-shaped.
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a1836 Encycl. Metrop. (1845) VII. 355*/2 There is not any bony external auditory passage; and the drum-ring, facing outwards and downwards, is large.
1839 Railway Times 4 May 362/1 Drum rings; cone pullies; lamp posts of all sizes and designs.
1984 Otorinolaringologia 34 529/2 Ponticulus lateralis.—The trabecula that connects the eminentia pyramidalis with the drum ring.
2010 U.S. Patent 2010/0279839 1/1 In its drum ring, the drum magazine includes tool chambers which extend parallel to the main axis.
drum riser n. an elevated platform on a stage for a drum kit and a drummer; cf. riser n. 7f.
ΚΠ
1976 Charleston (W. Va.) Gaz. 1 Nov. 28/4 He [sc. Ted Nugent] stalks the stage, jumping to the built-up drum riser and leaping off it (although he quit this Sunday after he made one jump and missed the riser).
1982 Billboard 26 June 47/4 We spent the last six or seven years using a lot of metal on stage and moving drum risers and hydraulic lifts.
2012 New Yorker 19 Mar. 85/1 Roth would open the show by..doing a flying kick-split, legs at three and nine, off the drum riser.
drum salt n. now chiefly historical a salt cellar in the form of an open-topped cylinder with a lid, both of which are typically heavily ornamented.
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the world > food and drink > food > setting table > table utensils > [noun] > vessel for sprinkling sugar, pepper, or salt > salt-cellar
saltfatc1000
salera1400
salt cellar1434
salt1493
drum salt1537
trencher salt1615
scroll salt1630
trencher salt cellar1681
standing salt1826
salt-sprinkler1864
salt-stand1869
salt-shaker1895
1537 Sir J. Dudley Let. 15 Mar. in Lett. & Papers Foreign & Domest. Henry VIII (1890) XII. i. 290 (modernized text) What a great brag they set upon it, for they made their drumsalt to strike a larum.
1891 All Year Round 21 Mar. 278/1 Thomas Waldo..also presented the Clothworkers' Company with a drum-salt.
2004 H. M. Clifford Treasured Inheritance iv. 74/2 In the mid-sixteenth century the standing salt..became smaller, a good example being the drum salt of 1554–5 at Corpus.
drum saw n. a saw in the form of a cylinder with a ring of teeth at one end, which is rotated to cut rounded pieces such as staves; also called barrel saw, tub saw.
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1850 C. Holtzapffel Turning & Mech. Manip. III. Index 1458/1 Crown, annular, curvilinear, or drum saws.
1919 N. C. Brown Forest Products v. 125 As soon as the staves are made on the drum saw or the stave cutter, they are received by a helper who loads them on carts.
2008 D. F. Megnin Farm Boy Sees World xv. 188 There was a need for sawyers to cut off the bolts to the appropriate lengths for the drum saws in the stave mill.
drumset n. = drum kit n.
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society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun] > set
drumset1920
drums1921
1920 Hist. U.S. Army Base Hosp. No. 20 at Univ. Pennsylvania vi. 174 Later the Red Cross furnished a drum set.
1983 Mid-Cities (Texas) Daily News 16 Sept. 3/2 His elaborate drumset is worth about $6,000.
2008 C. Close Burning Embers & Other Stories 101 I did not own a drumset, but I did own a pair of drumsticks.
drum sieve n. [after French crible à tambour (1762 or earlier)] a sieve in the form of a disc of fine mesh or similar material enclosed within a cylindrical frame.
ΚΠ
1765 tr. in Foreign Ess. Agric. & Arts xvi. 110 They pass the corn through drum-sieves (cribles à tambour) made of pierced iron plates.
1878 Metall. Rev. Apr. 189 Near the forwarding tower are four drum sieves.
2004 H. Blumenthal Family Food 24 A flat ‘drum sieve’, which looks a bit like one of those gold-prospectors' bowls.
drum stave n. a stave shaped so that it may form part of a drum or other cylindrical vessel; cf. stave n.1 4. N.E.D. (1897) at drum-staff gives the sense ‘a drumstick’. This is based on a misreading of quot. 1581 at drumslade n. 2α. as showing ‘drumstaves’.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun] > drumstick
sticka1398
tabor-stick1486
drumstick1589
tapskin1605
drum stave1832
potato masher1835
baguette1876
wire brush1927
brush1955
1832 J. McGregor Brit. Amer. II. 600/1 (table) Drum staves, ps...240,208.
1920 National Coopers' Jrnl. June 22/1 (advt.) Witney late style drum stave saw.
2003 D. Waring Making Drums 70 (caption) For cylindrical drum stave.
drum stool n. (a) a drum-shaped stool; (b) a stool to sit on while playing a drum kit, esp. one of adjustable height specifically designed for this.
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1927 H. M. Rideout Tao Tales v. 150 She lay curled on the ground with her head against a china drum-stool.
1965 Down Beat 28 Jan. 11/2 Perched on the drum stool was Art Taylor, accompanying tenor man Johnny Griffin, while another expatriate, pianist Kenny Drew, comped on piano.
1996 R. Van Horn Working Drummer 131/2 The drum stool: This is the single most important piece of equipment, relative to playing comfort, on the drumset.
2014 Property Observer (Nexis) 23 Sept. The bathroom also featured glass pendant lights and a gold Chinese drum stool.
drum-tight adj. and adv. (a) adj. very taut or tight (in various senses of the adjective); cf. (as) tight as a drum at tight adj., adv., and n.2 Additions; (b) adv. so as to be very tight or taut.
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1835 K. Thomson Rosabel II. ix. 120 This hat, of a globular form, made of chip, lined with silk, drum tight, and garnished with long streamers of ribbon at the sides.
1880 Brit. Jrnl. Photogr. 9 July 333/1 The gas bags must not be filled drumtight if you wish to keep the light steady.
1938 D. C. Peattie Prairie Grove v. 29 The skin did not seem to fit the cheekbones, being drum-tight.
1996 D. F. Wallace Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never do again (1997) 293 The Nadir 's chairs' material is not striated or cross-hatched in some web but is a solid expanse stretched drum-tight over the frame.
2014 Business Spectator (Nexis) 18 Sept. History shows that temporary visas..broadly did a lot to supply skilled labour to the drum-tight jobs market created by the resources boom.
drum tower n. (a) a kind of tower, particularly associated with East and South-East Asia, housing a drum which is sounded to raise the alarm or to mark the hour of the day; (b) a large cylindrical tower, frequently forming part of a castle or other fortified structure. [In sense (a) after French tour du tambour (1688 in the passage translated in quot. 1688) and its ultimate model Chinese gǔlóu (9th cent. or earlier; < drum + lóu tall building).]
ΚΠ
1688 tr. G. de Magalhães New Hist. China viii. 122 There are two Towers, the one call'd the Drum-Tower [Fr. la Tour du Tambour], and the other the Bell-Tower; which serve to tell the Hour of the Night.
1834 Chinese Repository 2 490 ‘The drum tower’ and ‘bell tower’..The former contains a drum and the latter a clock which are said to be heard in every part of the city.
1843 Hand-bk. Travellers in France i. 49/1 A citadel of singular form and strength,—a huge circular drum tower.
2003 W. Hung in R. S. Nelson & M. Olin Monuments & Memory v. 119 A drum tower and a bell tower flanked the southern gate of the imperial city.
2004 R. Tames R. Adam 38 In 1785 an existing wing was demolished and replaced by a drum tower with flanking rooms.
drum track n. (a) a track along which a drum-shaped object moves; (also) a track located on the surface of such an object; (b) Sound Recording a recording of rhythm played on the drums, esp. the drum part of a song or other piece of music.
ΚΠ
1893 Engin. News 31 Aug. 167/3 It is also essential that these panel points are so located that the strains are carried to the drum track by the most direct route.
1952 Roads & Streets June 87/2 Machined steel drum track, Timken bearing rollers and heavy duty transmission insure longest life, free from breakdowns on the job.
1961 Billboard Music Week 10 Apr. 26/3 Shavers achieves unusual sound effects via an additional ‘tape echo’ built into the final drum track.
2004 Global Rhythm Jan. 31/1 Kerpel sampled a drum track he recorded of Enzo Cuenca playing various patterns on a trap drum set.
drum trigger n. Music a device which converts strikes on a drum into electrical impulses, which can be used to trigger additional electronic sounds, control electronic equipment, etc., while playing.
ΚΠ
1984 Music Trades Nov. 79/1 It provides eight independent Drum Trigger Outputs for individual triggering of devices such as analog modules, synth trigger inputs, light controllers, etc.
1986 Musician July 46/3 Barcus Berry's new clip-on electret cymbal mikes and drum triggers are also well worth a look-see.
2006 M. Snyder Electronic Percussion ix. 112 Plug in an acoustic drum trigger and fatten up your kick drum sound.
drum wheel n. a rotating cylindrical component of a piece of mechanical apparatus.
ΚΠ
1749 Gentleman's Mag. June 249/2 Round the bottom part of this axle-tree is fixed a lantern- or drum-wheel.
1821 London Jrnl. Arts & Sci. 2 186 A large and also a small drum-wheel carry a number of scutchers or scrapers.
2009 T. McNeese Erie Canal viii. 96 A cable attached to the axle was anchored tightly around a stump; the other end of the cable was attached to a drum wheel.
drum-wine n. Obsolete rare (perhaps) cheap wine.The apparent implication being that the wine is sold to retailers by the barrel rather than the bottle.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > class or grade of wine > [noun] > cheap or inferior wine
drum-winea1640
red ink1849
Gladstone (claret)1864
pinkie1897
dago red1906
pinard1917
ink1918
plonk1927
grocer's Graves1931
grocer's wine1931
nelly1941
Red Ned1941
vaaljapie1945
purple death1947
grocer's sherry1958
papsak2004
a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) iii. i. 22 Yet not find a Chapman That in courtesie will bid a chop of mutton, Or a pint of Drum-wine for me.
drum-wound adj. Electrical Engineering (of an armature) having a drum winding (drum winding n. 2); (of a dynamo, motor, etc.) having an armature of this type.
ΚΠ
1886 Electrician 22 Oct. 489/2 The figure shows the connections of a drum-wound armature, having three pairs of coils.
1904 R. M. Walmsley Electr. in Service of Man ii. i. 756 A method of arranging the connections of drum-wound armatures..consists in winding and insulating the coils separately before placing them on the core.
2005 M. Brown et al. Pract. Troubleshooting Electr. Equipm. iv. 80 In a repulsion-start single-phase motor, a drum-wound rotor is used, which is similar to a squirrel-cage rotor.
C3.
drum-up n. [after to drum up at drum v.1 Phrasal verbs] British slang (now rare) an act of making (and consuming) tea or a light meal.
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the world > food and drink > drink > preparation of drinks > [noun] > preparation of tea
tea-making1826
teabag1886
drum-up1919
boil1940
brew-up1944
1919 Athenæum 8 Aug. 728/1 I've some sugar. If you get some tea and hot water we'll have a drum up.
1987 High Mar. 34/1 Once down there we had a quick drum-up.

Derivatives

ˈdrumlike adv. and adj.
ΚΠ
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x. 466 Wherevpon my hunger-clungd bellie waxing great, grew Drum-like imbolstered.
1722 Paschoud Historico-polit. Geogr. I. iii. 74 A Drum-like noise coming now and the from thence.
1888 T. N. Mukharji Art-manuf. of India iii. 84 The bottom of the drum-like body is closed with a thin piece of wood.
1937 E. Lanham Banner at Daybreak iii. xiii. 421 The horse's hoofs rang drum-like on the hard road.
1953 Abilene (Texas) Reporter-News 17 Mar. 1/2 The peculiar detonation set up a drumlike cacophony that reicocheted [sic] around the vast perimeter of the test ground.
2005 J. Fredston Snowstruck iii. 101 You note the drumlike sound of the snow.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

drumn.2

Brit. /drʌm/, U.S. /drəm/, Scottish English /drʌm/, Irish English /drʌm/
Forms: 1700s drym, 1700s– drum, 1800s– druim.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Irish. Partly a borrowing from Scottish Gaelic. Etymons: Irish druim; Scottish Gaelic druim.
Etymology: < Irish druim and Scottish Gaelic druim back (of a person or animal), (in the landscape) ridge (Early Irish druimm), of unknown origin.Earlier currency may be implied in Older Scots drumeheid highest part of a ridge (1602, with the second element head n.1), although it is uncertain whether the first element is to be interpreted as showing the Scottish Gaelic word (or place-name element) or an early borrowing into Scots. The form drym probably shows an attempt to reflect Irish pronunciation.
Now rare.
A smooth elongated hill or ridge; = drumlin n.A frequent element in Scottish and Irish place names.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > hill > [noun] > long or narrow
drum1732
drumlin1812
1732 R. Innes Misc. Lett. to Dr. Nicholson i. 4 The Low-Land of Magilligan is divided into Ridges (or as we call them Dryms) of Sand.
1797 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. XIX. 342 These singular ridges of Nature called here drums.
1833 Jrnl. Royal Geol. Soc. Dublin 1 37 The names Drum and Drumlin (Dorsum) have been applied to such hills as we have been describing.
1873 J. O'Hanlon Lives Irish Saints 482 It has all the characteristics of a druim, or ridge.
1874 J. Geikie Great Ice Age ii. 18 The long parallel ridges, or ‘sowbacks’ and ‘drums’, as they are termed..invariably coincide in direction with the valleys or straths in which they lie.
1903 Summary Progress Geol. Surv. U.K. ii. ii. 139 The glacial deposits are chiefly represented by a dark grey boulder clay, which sometimes forms drums or ridges.
1988 W. Neill Making Tracks 56 Pit back the aik, the rowan an the sallysee yince again the blackthorn on the druim.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

drumn.3

Brit. /drʌm/, U.S. /drəm/
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: drum n.1
Etymology: Origin uncertain; the two senses may both show specific sense developments of drum n.1In sense 1 perhaps with allusion to the noise typical at such gatherings; compare slightly later drum n.1 3, drum v.1, and with similar semantic development also racket n.2 and bash n.1 2. Sense 2 may show development from sense 1 (i.e. from a social gathering to a venue for such gatherings), although given that the two senses occur in different social contexts, it may rather represent an independent development from drum n.1, either with similar allusion to noise or in a more concrete sense: compare extended uses of drum n.1 for containers of various kinds, especially with application of the present word to a prison cell (with similar semantic development compare e.g. can n.1 6). It has alternatively been suggested that use in the sense ‘home’ may show an extended use of drum n.4 or its etymon Romani drom path, way, on the grounds that the road was considered home among travelling communities; however, a sense ‘home’ appears not to be attested for the Romani word, and evidence to support such semantic development within English is lacking.
1. A social gathering held at a private house, attended by people from fashionable society. Cf. racket n.2 2, rout n.1 8. Now historical.A fashionable social activity in Britain during the latter half of the 18th and beginning of the 19th cent.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > social event > social gathering > [noun] > crowded or fashionable
drumc1743
rout1745
hurricane1746
squeeze1779
routationa1800
cram1810
crush1832
c1743 W. Hogarth in R. L. S. Cowley Marriage A-la-mode (1983) 112 [Invitation depicted in painting] L[ad]y Squanders Com[pany] is desir'd at Lady Townlys Drum Munday next.
1745 E. Haywood Female Spectator II. xii. 328 She told me, that when the Number of Company for Play exceeded ten Tables, it was called a Racquet, if under it was only a Rout, and if no more than one or two, it was only a Drum.
1745 E. Montagu Let. 19 Nov. (1813) III. 37 I wish we had..our vanities, as last year; that by the word Drum we understood a polite assembly, and by a Rout only an engagement of hoop-petticoats.
1779 A. L. Barbauld Let. 20 Jan. in Wks. (1825) II. 22 Do you know the different terms? There is a squeeze, a fuss, a drum, a rout, and lastly a hurricane, when the whole house is full from top to bottom.
1824 Countess Granville Let. 5 Dec. (1894) I. 317 We went last night to a drum at Rothschild's.
1879 Gentleman's Mag. Mar. 330 He may..canter over to Kew and look round the gardens, or attend a drum.
1899 E. Callow From King Orry to Queen Victoria xii. 117 In those days ladies of fashion gave what were called 'drums'—a party that..comprised a cup of tea, a little whist or piquet, and a good deal of scandal.
1916 PMLA 31 86 Women who would be fashionable at any cost..who talk of their ‘circle’, their drums and routs.
1993 K. Follett Dangerous Fortune 28 Augusta was having a drum, an afternoon tea-party, to show off her house.
2. slang (originally British). A house or other dwelling; a room or establishment for accommodation or recreation; spec. (a) a drinking-place or nightclub; (b) a brothel; (c) a prison cell.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > [noun]
bottleeOE
houseeOE
boldOE
building1297
builda1387
edificec1386
mansion1389
bigginga1400
housinga1400
edification1432
edifying1432
fabric1483
edify1555
structure1560
erection1609
framec1639
bastiment1679
drum1846
dump1899
gaff1932
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > a house > [noun]
houseeOE
homeOE
houseOE
roofa1382
housinga1400
bike1508
dwelling-house1530
firehouse1530
standing house?1532
mansion house1533
maisonc1540
beinga1616
smoke-housea1687
drum1846
khazi1846
casa1859
shack1910
kipsie1916
machine for living (in)1927
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > cell
houseOE
cabinc1522
hole1535
lodging1612
hold1717
cell1728
lock-up room1775
glory-hole1825
box1834
drum1846
sweat-box1870
booby-hutch1889
Peter1890
booby1899
boob1908
flowery dell1925
slot1947
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > accommodation or lodging > public lodging-places > [noun] > boarding house
pensiona1652
boarding-house1728
lodging-house1766
private hotel1796
drum1846
boarding-place1854
lodging-hall1860
rooming house1873
chawl1891
model1899
guest house1925
kipping-house1925
pensione1929
pensionnat1963
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > brothel
houseOE
bordelc1300
whorehousec1330
stew1362
bordel housec1384
stewc1384
stivec1386
stew-house1436
bordelryc1450
brothel house1486
shop?1515
bains1541
common house1545
bawdy-house1552
hothouse1556
bordello1581
brothela1591
trugging house1591
trugging place1591
nunnery1593
vaulting-house1596
leaping house1598
Pickt-hatch1598
garden house1606
vaulting-school1606
flesh-shambles1608
whore-sty1621
bagnioa1640
public house1640
harlot-house1641
warrena1649
academy1650
call house1680
coney burrow1691
case1699
nanny-house1699
house of ill reputea1726
smuggling-ken1725
kip1766
Corinth1785
disorderly house1809
flash-house1816
dress house1823
nanny-shop1825
house of tolerance1842
whore shop1843
drum1846
introducing house1846
khazi1846
fast house1848
harlotry1849
maison de tolérance1852
knocking-shop1860
lupanar1864
assignation house1870
parlour house1871
hook shop1889
sporting house1894
meat house1896
massage parlour1906
case house1912
massage establishment1921
moll-shop1923
camp1925
notch house1926
creep joint1928
slaughterhouse1928
maison de convenance1930
cat-house1931
Bovril1936
maison close1939
joy-house1940
rib joint1940
gaff1947
maison de passe1960
rap parlour1973
1846 ‘Lord Chief Baron’ Swell's Night Guide (new ed.) To Rdr. p. iii The..cracksman, who would screw [i.e. burgle] a drum.
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 418/1 Suppose I want to ask a pal to..have a game at cards with some blokes at home with me, I should say..‘Splodger, will you..have a touch of the broads with me and the other heaps of coke at my drum.’
1859 G. W. Matsell Vocabulum 28 Drum, a drinking-place.
1899 R. Whiteing No. 5 John St. i. ii. 15 ‘That's my drum two doors beyond.’ His drum was better to look at.
1903 A. H. Lewis Boss iii. 32 He said the Dead Rabbit was a drum for crooks!
1908 K. McGaffey Sorrows of Show Girl xx. 234 I never saw such a drum. A great big room with a real bed instead of those shelve things and off of the room a bath, and we were only to be on the water five days.
1938 D. Runyon Furthermore xii. 231 The bar in Good Time Charley's little drum in West Forty-ninth Street.
1966 L. Southworth Felon in Disguise iii. 53 They probably checked at the Probation Office as soon as they left my drum.
1967 K. Giles Death in Diamonds vi. 118 ‘You get that way running a drum,’ grunted Crook... ‘A drum?’ ‘The house that ain't a home,’ said Harry.
1993 J. M. Yates Line Screw ii. 30 Both East and West were of normal capacity, holding 150 to 200 drums (cells are called drums or houses, never cells).
2000 D. Adebayo My Once upon Time (2001) v. 120 Her friend's drum was a few minutes on, west-central rather than west-west.

Compounds

drum-room n. Obsolete rare a room in which a drum or social gathering is held; see sense 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > place of amusement or entertainment > [noun] > assembly rooms or halls
redoubt1702
assembly-room1744
drum-room1749
assembly house1762
pantheon1772
casino1789
pleasure dome1816
palace1831
melodeon1840
kursaal1850
winter garden1859
music hallc1883
Met1896
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones IV. xi. ix. 172 The bonny House-maid begins to repair the disordered Drum-Room.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

drumn.4

Brit. /drʌm/, U.S. /drəm/
Forms: 1700s– drum, 1900s– drom.
Origin: A borrowing from Romani. Etymon: Romani drom.
Etymology: < Romani drom path, way ( < ancient Greek δρόμος : see -drome comb. form). Compare earlier rum pad n.
British slang. Now rare (in later use only in historical contexts).
A street; a road.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > street > [noun]
streetOE
rewa1350
gate1488
gate-row1598
calle1611
drive1799
drag1851
drum1851
plate of meat1857
stem1914
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 217/2 We..slink into the crib (house) in the back drum (street).
1889 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang I. 332/1 Drum means also a street, a road... It may have come directly from the English gypsy drum (old form drom), which is, truly, from the Greek δρομός, a road.
1896 J. S. Farmer Musa Pedestris 64 Just as he turned the corner of the drum, His dear lov'd Bess, the bunter, chanc'd to come.
1906 A. McCormick Tinkler-gypsies Galloway iv. 194 Said I, ‘What's yer word for..Road?’ ‘Drum,’ said William Marshall.
2003 J. M. Gray Fiend in Human (2004) vi. 46 Hasn't slipped out the back drum, has he?
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

drumv.1

Brit. /drʌm/, U.S. /drəm/
Forms: see drum n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: drum n.1
Etymology: < drum n.1 Compare Dutch trommen (1551), Middle High German trummen (in late sources; German (now regional: Alsace, Swabia) trommen , trummen ), Swedish trumma (1536). Compare the Germanic verbs cited at drumble v.2, and also earlier drumming n.
1.
a. transitive. Originally: to convey (a message or command) by beating a drum; Military to signal (an advance, retreat, etc.) with a drum. Later also: to perform (a rhythm or piece of music) on a drum.Apparently rare before 19th cent.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > beating drum > beat drum [verb (transitive)] > beat (tune) on
taborc1385
drum1578
rub-a-dub1855
rataplan1865
1578 R. Day Bk. Christian Prayers f. 89 (margin) We drum that domes day now at hand: Doth call all soldiers to deathes band.
1829 J. Roby Trad. Lancs. II. 210 He..stepped upon the redoubt, drumming the usual signal for a parley.
1847 Amer. Rev. Aug. 170/1 If I did not know the meaning of liberté, he would drum the Marseilles march.
1883 J. H. Boteler Recoll. of my Sea Life 59 Before the retreat was drummed, ‘Hear the news..by next muster day everyone will be expected to appear in a frock and trowsers.’
1969 R. de Crespigny tr. Ssu-ma Kuang Last of Han lxv. 252 Once you have destroyed Tsu's army, drum the advance to the west and occupy Ch'u-kuan.
2005 C. Coe Dilemmas Culture Afr. Schools vi. 176 Felicity..was trying to drum the beginning rhythm of an adowa beat.
b. intransitive. To beat or play on a drum; to perform as a drummer.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > beating drum > beat drum [verb (intransitive)]
tabor1377
taborna1400
nakerc1425
drum1597
dub-a-dub1598
to beat a drum1621
rub-a-dub1837
beat1841
to beat a tattoo1841
tom-tom1860
rataplan1863
tambourin1884
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet i. iv. 86 Then anon [she] Drums in his eare: at which he startes and wakes. View more context for this quotation
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage viii. xiii. 681 They danced and sung, the chiefe Priests drumming and sounding other instruments.
1798 Anti-Jacobin 2 July 560 A Drummer..being demanded to drum, leaped upon it, and broke it to pieces.
1872 C. Gibbon For King I. i. 2 He drummed with enthusiasm.
1882 W. Besant Revolt of Man (1883) xiv. 324 [They] found..a cart containing drums. They seized them and began drumming with all their might.
1921 Forest Leaves 20 Oct. 12/2 I drummed at Bryan hall for the ladies of the fair and was one of their messengers.
1990 Boys' Life Nov. 44/1 My teacher..said he'd shoot the footage of the band, so I can drum.
2007 Spin Apr. 50/4 Fikerle used to drum for a controversial punk group called Jihad Against America.
2.
a. intransitive. To make a sound like the beating of a drum; to resound.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > repeated sound or succession of sounds > [verb (intransitive)] > drum > sound like drum
drum1582
drumble1830
1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis iii. 59 Thee rocks sternelye facing with salt fluds spumye be drumming [L. obiectae salsa spumant aspergine cautes].
1597 T. Middleton Wisdome of Solomon Paraphr. xiv. sig. R4v Murders pawe did gripe their harts, With whispring horrors drumming in each eare.
1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) i. §51 This indeed makes a noise, and drums in popular ears. View more context for this quotation
1792 J. Wolcot Wks. Peter Pindar (new ed.) III. 28 The Parson..heard them coming, Fell discord in his ears thus drumming.
1860 W. D. O'Connor Harrington xiii. 237 The dark and furious music, swarming and drumming loudly from the bass keys, sunk away.
1916 Munsey's Mag. Feb. 100/2 He..banged his fist against the flannel-covered canteen on his thigh. It drummed with a hollow sound.
1962 D. Francis Dead Cert (1976) xv. 297 His hooves clattered loudly on the tarmac, drummed on the firm verge, and he lifted into the air like a bird.
2006 C. Frazier Thirteen Moons ii. viii. 150 The whole place drummed with the stomp of boot heels.
b. intransitive. spec. Of a person's heart or heartbeat, the blood, etc.: to beat hard or quickly with anxiety, excitement, fear, etc.; to throb.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > vascular system > circulation > pulsation > heartbeat > [verb (intransitive)] > types of
tripc1430
duntc1550
drum1594
palpitate1623
race1853
1594 [implied in: W. Shakespeare Lucrece sig. D3v His drumming heart cheares vp his burning eye. View more context for this quotation].
1690 J. Dryden Don Sebastian iv. i. 72 Now Heart..Set ope thy Sluces,..Then, take thy rest within thy quiet Cell; For thou shalt drum no more.
1795 ‘P. Pindar’ Pindariana 142 My heart against my ribs keeps drumming, As if to caper out.
1833 Tait's Edinb. Mag. July 528 A tweak of this description..is very apt to set the heart drumming, and the blood racing.
1894 H. R. Haggard People of Mist xiii. 101 The blood drummed in his ears and his senses began to fail.
1951 J. G. Neihardt When Tree Flowered xi. 78 When I saw it was High Horse, my heart drummed; but when he came close I could see that it was bad with him.
1991 New Eng. Rev. Spring 84 I..felt my pulse drumming in the roof of my mouth.
2002 F. Craft Haunted Heart ii. 23 Her heart drummed in her breast and she felt dizzy with desire she could hardly control.
c. intransitive. Of a bird or insect: to make a loud, reverberating sound, as by the rapid quivering of wings or the repeated hammering of a bill.Esp. in reference to the ruffled grouse, whose courtship display is entirely non-vocal and based on drumming.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > by noises > voice or sound made by animal > make sound [verb (intransitive)] > make beating sound with wings
druma1793
a1793 J. Arnold in J. L. Arnold Poems (1797) 139 (title) On hearing a partridge drum.
1847 R. W. Emerson Poems 53 He saw the partridge drum in the woods.
1873 J. E. Taylor Half-hours in Green Lanes 2 Flies and gnats drum around you.
1911 Out West May 383/2 Down from there floated the discordant beat, beat of pheasants, drumming, as is their wont at twilight.
1991 Bird Watching June 42/2 Even the more reliable snipe which by now should be ‘drumming’ and ‘chipping’ from all round the reserve are hardly in evidence.
2002 Times 13 Mar. (Business section) 34/1 Great spotted woodpeckers are drumming with their strong beaks on tree trunks.
3. To strike a series of blows or taps upon something, esp. so as to produce a continuous or rhythmic noise; to beat or knock as if upon a drum.
a. intransitive. Of a person. Frequently with at, on, upon. Also with with (the fingers, feet, etc., esp. as expressive of boredom, agitation, or impatience).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > repeated sound or succession of sounds > [verb (intransitive)] > drum
tabor1579
drum1594
tattoo1806
1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. O3v Brauely did hee [sc. the executioner] drum on this Cutwolfes bones.
1623 J. Webster Deuils Law-case ii. sig. C4v Potecaries..will put foure or fiue coxcombs into a sieue, and so drumme with them vpon their Counter.
1660 tr. M. Amyraut Treat. conc. Relig. iii. ii. 336 Some of them drumming upon Kettles, sum upon Bucklers.
1672 O. Walker Of Educ. ii. i. 215 Sing not to your self, nor drum with your feet or fingers in company, as melancholick men do.
?1701 tr. G. della Casa Galateus 23 We must also carefully avoid the custome, which so many have, to wit, of Whistling and Drumming with our Fingers.
1725 J. Windus Journey to Mequinez 8 A little broad Hoop, with pieces of lose [sic] Tin on the Sides, which he shook with one Hand, and drummed on it with the other.
1778 F. Burney Let. 23 Aug. in Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1994) III. 101 She got a Harpsichord..put herself in fine attitudes, & Drum'd.
1835 W. Irving Tour on Prairies 51 They..began a low nasal chant, drumming with their hands upon their breasts, by way of accompaniment.
1861 T. Hughes Tom Brown at Oxf. I. xii. 221 They soon found themselves drumming at his oak, which was opened shortly.
1865 E. G. Storke & L. P. Brockett Compl. Hist. Great Amer. Rebellion II. iii. 1555 [He] was standing at the window looking through the panes, upon which he was drumming with his fingers.
1942 A. M. Lindbergh Diary 31 July in War within & Without (1980) 281 Land is..sitting up on the piano stool drumming gaily and incoherently at the keys.
1997 P. C. Doherty Haunting (1998) viii. 123 Oliver paused and stared down at the window now being lashed by the branches of the rose bush,..as if someone were drumming with their fingers, desperate to get in.
b. transitive. Of a person, or the fingers, feet, etc., with the thing struck as object.
ΚΠ
1698 G. Granville Heroick Love iv. i. 46 Like the Corybantes..,Each drumming in his hand a Brazen Cymbal.
1808 Agric. Mag. Sept. 175 My rabbits..frisked and ‘drummed [’] the floor with their hinder feet.
1845 R. F. Williams Maids of Honour I. v. 120 He whistled with a vacant air, and sometimes drummed the table.
1894 Cornhill Mag. Feb. 153 His fingers drum the dock ledge.
1922 H. K. Webster Joseph Greer & his Daughter vi. 288 Aldrich was staring out the window, his finger drumming the table.
1996 B. Haveland tr. P. Høeg Woman & Ape (1997) ii. ii. 49 His fingers drummed the sheet of paper.
2012 P. Grossman Children of Wrath xv. 144 Weiss picked up a pencil. ‘Thing is, what to do about it now?’ He drummed the desk.
c. transitive. Of a person, or the fingers, feet, etc., with the rhythm tapped or beaten out as object.
ΚΠ
1728 Mem. Eng. Officer 279 I have seen a Country Girl manage her Castanets..to Peoples beating or druming [sic] a Tune with their Hands on a Table.
1841 Metropolitan Sept. 103 Concluding the exhibition by sliding down on her back, and drumming the Rogue's March on the floor with her heels.
1877 F. K. Berger Winter in City of Pleasure 208 We can see..the nerveless fingers begin drumming a tattoo upon the lid of the diamond snuff-box.
1891 H. Herman His Angel iv. 69 He drummed an unconscious rataplan on the table with his knife.
1893 J. McCarthy Dictator I. i. 9 He drummed the national hymn of Gloria upon the balcony-rail with his fingers.
1910 Baroness Orczy Lady Molly vi. 142 An elderly, somewhat florid woman..sat on a high-backed chair close to a table, on which her fingers were nervously drumming a tattoo.
1959 Boys' Life Apr. 67/2 Mr. Miller drummed a tattoo with his finger on the desk.
2004 ‘E. Cooke’ Bk. of Tricks 124 Josh drummed some jungle beat on the tabletop.
d. transitive. Of a person, with the thing (often the fingers or feet) used to beat or tap something as object. Frequently with on, upon.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > beating or repeated striking > beat [verb (transitive)] > as a drum > beat (something) as on a drum
drum1827
1827 C. I. Johnstone Elizabeth De Bruce III. iii. 52 Her Ladyship evidently in a furious passion, now pausing, and now stamping and drumming her tall walking-stick on the floor.
1851 D. Jerrold St. Giles & St. James (new ed.) xxxiv, in Writings I. 353 Shall I..drum my fingers upon the table?
1886 G. R. Sims Ring o' Bells i. ii. 37 All the company waiting and drumming their heels.
1903 Windsor Mag. 18 560/2 Bicester never opened his mouth, but sat staring before him, drumming his finger-tips on the frame of the chair.
1993 J. Green It: Sex since Sixties 74 You often see a guy standing at the bar drumming his fingers while his wife dances with another woman.
2009 ‘R. Keeland’ tr. S. Larsson Girl who played with Fire xxx. 535 Blomkvist drummed his fingers in annoyance on the tabletop in the restaurant car.
e. intransitive. Of the fingers, feet, etc. Usually with on.
ΚΠ
1828 T. Carlyle in Foreign Rev. 2 437 Every sentence..has..a given rythm,..simple but limited enough, like that of ill-bred fingers drumming on a table.
1862 G. A. Sala Seven Sons Mammon I. vii. 165 [Her] foot was drumming on the carpet.
1912 T. Dreiser Financier xlv. 494 Short, fat-fingered hands, which drummed idly on his desk as he talked.
1989 L. Clarke Chymical Wedding (1990) iv. 91 Frere sat down, fingers drumming on the arm of his chair.
2011 D. Levien Contract lvii. 212 He returned to his own car and sat there again, his fingers drumming on the wheel.
4.
a. transitive. To summon by, or as if by, beating a drum; to draw or drive (esp. animals) in a specified direction, or into a particular course of action, by making a drumming noise. See also to drum up 1a at Phrasal verbs.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) i. iv. 29 Such time, That drummes him from his sport. View more context for this quotation
1657 J. Bentham Χοροθεολογον 46 As if none are so dead, but dancing will drumm up.
1762 London Chron. 10 Aug. 145/2 A drum came to beat up for volunteers,..which obstructed their business; and they complaining thereof, the drum came into the room, and drummed them all out.
1883 Official Catal. Internat. Fisheries Exhib. (ed. 4) 160 The fish are drummed up by striking two shells..together.
1914 Country Life in Amer. Dec. 104/3 The boys..closed threateningly around Muggs to keep him from drumming the birds into flight.
1938 J. W. Day Sport in Egypt v. 51 The fishermen went on beating their petrol tins, drumming the fish into a long line of staked and buoyed nets.
2014 www.nutsandboltsfishing.com 14 Jan. (O.E.D. Archive) We cranked up the band and started ‘drumming’ the fish to the boat.
b. transitive. To dismiss or expel in disgrace, originally from a regiment, military service, etc. Later also more generally: to expel, drive out. Frequently in to drum out of.Originally with reference to the military practice of accompanying the expulsion of an offender with the playing of specific music by a regimental drummer (cf. rogue's march n. at rogue n. and adj. Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming out > letting or sending out > let or send out [verb (transitive)] > expel > specific people from a place, position, or possession > forcibly or ignominiously
eject1555
rumble1570
obtrude1595
to show (a person) the door1638
to kick downstairs1678
to kick out1697
drum1720
firk1823
to chuck out1869
bounce1877
boot1880
out-kick1883
turf1888
hoof1893
hound1922
1720 C. Brockwell Chronological Hist. Great-Brit. 1148 One Devenish..was sentenc'd by a Court-Martial to be ty'd to a Tree and whipt by the First, Second, and Third Regiments of Guards at three several Times, and afterwards to be drummed out of the Regiment.
1766 T. Amory Life John Buncle II. x. 372 They..ought to be drummed out of society.
1795 Scots Mag. Dec. 836/2 If you have an ear, I'll cut it off, and drum you back to Fife.
1811 Naval Chron. 25 28 You are to be drummed ashore.
1814 Z. Taylor Let. 6 Sept. in J. R. Irelan Republic (1888) XII. ii. 29 I determined to drum them [sc. the enemy] from the island, let their numbers be what they might.
1859 Harper's Mag. Feb. 292/2 He would be drummed out of the county on a wooden horse.
1934 Hammond (Indiana) Times 30 Mar. 13/1 The soldier, either in war or peace, who so manifestly failed..would have been drummed from the service.
1952 Life 17 Nov. 85 If by chance he likes them equally well, both camps will drum him out of culinary society.
1996 Advocate 14 May 14/3 Parsons was drummed off the coach's bench in 1981.
2008 J. Fisher Forensics under Fire i. 14 The fact that he was drummed out of the profession indicates that he was, even by the most lenient standards, incompetent and corrupt.
5.
a. transitive. To drive (a lesson, idea, etc.) into a person, a person's mind, etc., by constant repetition, forceful admonition, or the like; to drive (a tendency, belief, etc.) out of a person by similar means.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > instilling ideas > instil ideas [verb (transitive)] > inculcate
inculk1528
whet1528
to beat (a thing) into one's head1533
ding1555
inculcate1559
to beat in1561
lesson1602
screw1602
inconculcate1610
drum1648
instil1660
indoctrinate1800
drill1863
pan1940
1648 R. Chestlin Persecutio Undecima ii. 4 An intended Tyranny, which the Fanatick Faction..so drummed into the Peoples Ears, even to a Frensie of ridiculous Fears and Jealousies.
1729 H. Carey Poems (ed. 3) 149 My Mother she says I'm too coming, And still in my Ears she is drumming, That I am too young to wed.
1817 M. Edgeworth Two Guardians i. ii, in Comic Dramas 155 Jul. The classics! Beau. Aye, they not having been flogged and drummed into him, the fellow falls into transports with Homer and Horace.
1827 Asiatic Jrnl. & Monthly Reg. Mar. 429/2 That idea was now..drummed out of them.
1890 Jrnl. Educ. Mar. 149/1 Children appear with pitiable scraps of phrases that have been drummed into their heads out of text-books.
1926 J. Black You can't Win viii. 97 Smiler had continually drummed it into me never to answer any questions in case we were arrested.
1979 Guardian 4 Jan. 8/6 Their [sc. painters'] natural skills can be drummed out of them by over-zealous coaching.
2011 J. Buchan Trawlerman ii. 27 It was a lesson that had been drummed into me ever since I was a wee boy.
b. transitive. To drive (a person) into or to a certain state or action by constant repetition, prolonged haranguing, or the like. Also (occasionally) without construction: to harass in this way.
ΚΠ
1820 P. B. Shelley Œdipus Tyrannus i. 20 I have hummed her and drummed her From place to place, till at last I have dumbed her.
1828 Marly: Planter's Life in Jamaica iv. 56 Marly..was not to be drummed into such a practice, however universal, by arguments.
1866 H. Bushnell Vicarious Sacrifice iii. ii. 257 The soul..can not drum itself to sleep in mere generalities of wrong.
1917 H. J. Laski Stud. Probl. Sovereignty iv. 167 The world had to be drummed into subjection and the universal supremacy of the Pope was the weapon with which the change was to be effected.
1987 R. Colls Pitmen Northern Coalfield xii. 190 National Miners' Association delegate-preachers were frequent speakers at teetotal missions..and the chapels and societies were drummed into regular union prayers.
6. transitive. Chiefly colloquial. To beat or thump violently, as if beating a drum; to thrash, to beat up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > beating or repeated striking > beat [verb (transitive)] > as a drum
drum1655
tattoo1780
1655 W. Gouge & T. Gouge Learned Comm. Hebrewes (xi. 35) iii. 214 They who are so rack't and beaten, were said to be stretcht, and beaten as a drum, or to be drummed.
1850 P. Crook War of Hats 54 Lantern-Jaw,..With a curst cudgel drumming him behind, Courses like hunted hare before the hound.
1879 R. Jefferies Wild Life i. 8 It is amusing to see two of these animals drumming each other; they stand on their hind legs..and strike with the fore-pads as if boxing.
1988 K.O. Nov. 16/2 Canizales was patient, drumming Seabrooks with several solid blows.
7.
a. intransitive. To call or solicit for people to join a military force (originally to the accompaniment of a drum).In later use frequently regarded as a spec. use of sense 7b(a).
ΚΠ
1770 I. Bickerstaff Recruiting Serjeant (new ed.) ii. 14 Here thee wert sent, A drumming for recruits.
1863 H. Fuller North & South 28 Drumming for recruits already is like calling ‘spirits from the vasty deep’. The question is, Will they come?
1876 E. H. Shallenberger Stark County (Illinois) & its Pioneers i. iv. 90 With his officers and part of the old company as a nucleus, he drummed for recruits in different parts of the county.
1944 New Eng. Q. 17 183 Some said that Kidd had no legal authority to drum for men in New York.
1974 H. L. Wickes Regiments of Foot 51 The eighteenth-century practice of recruiting sergeants who carried oatcakes on their sword points when drumming for recruits.
b. colloquial (originally and chiefly U.S.).
(a) intransitive. More generally: to solicit, esp. vigorously or aggressively, for customers, business, (in later use also) political support, funding, etc.; to tout, canvass. Also without for: to solicit for custom; to work as a sales representative. Cf. drummer n. 3a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > request > make a request [verb (intransitive)] > urgently or persistently
pressa1425
instandc1450
to put at ——1534
importune1548
push1595
to put upon ——a1617
drum1833
what-the-hell1924
opportune1941
1833 [implied in: Constellation (N.Y.) 8 June 308/1 That mode of getting custom, employed by certain merchants, and commonly known by the name of Drumming has been very rife the present season. (at drumming n. 1)].
1834 A. Greene Perils of Pearl Street xiii. 103 We resolved unanimously, that whoever chose, might drum, we would not.
1852 Spirit of Times 9 Oct. 402/3 All [the boats] were engaged in drumming for passengers.
1882 Congress. Rec. 315/1 The merchants..have many thousands..drumming for business in every town.
1901 Chambers's Jrnl. Dec. 827/1 I was ‘drumming’ for one of the two great houses which divided the wool and the hides of the Argentine.
1922 National Druggist June 262/1 You don't have to drum for trade at this season, but you must use them [sc. customers] right when they flock into your place of business.
1995 T. B. Spears 100 Years on Road i. 27 Some jobbers' clerks may have alternatively dunned and drummed, sometimes traveling to collect bills, other times staying in the city to solicit customs.
2013 Vanguard (Lagos) (Nexis) 26 Dec. Campaigners..have invaded Abuja with campaign posters, drumming for support for the President.
(b) transitive. To subject (a potential customer) to aggressive or vigorous selling techniques; to solicit custom, support, etc., from. Later also: to attempt to obtain (custom, etc.) by solicitation; = to drum up 1a at Phrasal verbs.
ΚΠ
1834 A. Greene Perils of Pearl Street ix. 76 Perhaps the most laughable scene of drumming is that wherein one city merchant attempts to drum another.
1862 Daily Cleveland (Ohio) Herald 5 July The Convention is, numerically, a strong one: the State having been thoroughly ‘drummed’, and all of the ‘faithful’ urged to come without regard to ratio of representation.
1868 North Amer. & U.S. Gaz. (Philadelphia) 14 Aug. Every one who drums trade throughout the country should join with them.
1916 F. W. Betts Billy Sunday viii. 63 Central New York is being ‘drummed’ for religion by a group of men who impress one still as ‘drummers’.
1978 College Composition & Communication 29 60/1 In summarizing the book.., the diction is for all the world like a nineteenth-century handbill drumming customers for a medicine show.
1985 Times 25 June 16/3 It was difficult to drum business in the money markets yesterday.
2011 M. Muro & B. Katz in G. D. Libecap & S. Hoskinson Entrepreneurship & Global Competitiveness in Regional Economies v. 126 They conduct their own trade missions to drum business for key exporting firms.
8. transitive. To drown out by drumming or a similar loud noise. Also with down in same sense.
ΚΠ
1842 Emancipator & Free Amer. (Boston) 8 Sept. 76/1 A few years ago a lecturer was drummed down in this place.
1864 F. Palgrave Hist. Normandy & Eng. IV. 580 The voice of conscience drummed down by popular excitement.
1957 C. Thomas in W. Stegner & R. Scowcroft Stanford Short Stories 1957 98 She let her words trail away and be drummed out by the fast tattoo of the radiator.
1984 C. Segura Bayou 249 The trader's talker protested, but he was drummed down by many voices.
2009 Cape Times (Nexis) 27 Oct. 24 The..sound..of the wind..was drummed out by the sound of loud hip-hop music.
9. transitive. colloquial (Australian and New Zealand). Originally Betting. To supply with pertinent information (cf. drum n.1 4); to warn, tip off; (more generally) to inform, tell. Also with up. Now somewhat dated.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > action of informing > give (information) [verb (transitive)] > inform (a person)
to teach a person a thingc888
meanOE
wiseOE
sayOE
wittera1225
tellc1225
do to witc1275
let witc1275
let seec1330
inform1384
form1399
lerea1400
to wit (a person) to saya1400
learn1425
advertise1431
givec1449
insense?c1450
instruct1489
ascertain1490
let1490
alighta1500
advert1511
signify1523
reform1535
advise1562
partake1565
resolve1568
to do to ware1594
to let into one's knowledge1596
intellect1599
possess1600
acquainta1616
alighten1615
recommenda1616
intelligence1637
apprise1694
appraise1706
introduce1741
avail1785
prime1791
document1807
to put up1811
to put a person au fait of1828
post1847
to keep (someone) straight1862
monish1866
to put next to1896
to put (one) wise (to)1896
voice1898
in the picture1900
to give (someone) a line on1903
to wise up1905
drum1908
hip1932
to fill (someone) in on1945
clue1948
background1961
to mark a person's card1961
to loop in1994
1908 N.Z. Truth 18 Apr. 2 The unsuspecting lad fell in and drummed everybody that the horse was oomey [i.e. certain to lose].
1909 Sunday Times (Perth, Austral.) 25 July 10/5 The fellow on the racecourse who..‘drums’ you that Such-and-Such ran ‘five in 2’ that morning and can't miss.
1919 V. Marshall World of Living Dead 30 He impressed upon me the exact location of the maternal abode, and proceeded to ‘drum me up’ with the message.
1969 D. Niland Dead Men Running iii. 86 Jesus, don't bite me, son. I was only gonna drum you.
1988 P. Pinney Barbarians 7 Where's the big emergency they've been drumming us about?
10. transitive. Criminals' slang. To ring or knock at the door of (a house or other residence) to ascertain whether it is unoccupied before attempting a burglary; (more generally) to reconnoitre (a place) with a view to a burglary; (later also) to burgle. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > rob [verb (intransitive)] > inspect before robbery
drum1909
to case the joint, gaff, job, etc.1914
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > rob [verb (transitive)] > inspect before robbery
drum1909
prowl1909
1909 Westm. Gaz. 26 Aug. 8/3 He got round him some eight young men, and these he induced to ‘drum’ for him.
1933 C. E. Leach On Top of Underworld x. 138 Drumming a place, ringing or knocking to see if occupants are at home.
1936 ‘J. Curtis’ Gilt Kid ii. 23 ‘My God, you got the gaff weighed up good.’ ‘Not half. A bloke drummed it for me and put me wide.’
1970 ‘B. Mather’ Break in Line vi. 77 I bet Chatterjee's been drumming every room in the joint.
1992 R. Graef Living Dangerously iii. 89 I don't do cars, or drum (burgle) people's houses.
2004 N. Smith Few Kind Words & Loaded Gun ii. 38 You're out drumming. We've watched you knocking on doors to see if people are in and trying to get round the backs of houses.

Phrases

to drum home: to make someone learn or understand (something) by constant repetition; to emphasize (a point, fact, etc.) by repeating it.
ΚΠ
1907 Electr. Rev. 15 Nov. 827/2 To alcohol..we are told will posterity have to turn for fuel... A cheerful outlook! but none the less a fact which ought to be drummed home to those careless wasters who throw away half the capacity of the fuel they burn.
1921 Administration Dec. 821 In drumming home this point.., Mr Raymond thus quotes from a well-known business authority.
1997 W. Self Great Apes (1998) xiv. 236 I showed you that I would be having another patient staying with us, but I just want to drum this home a bit more.
2005 Independent on Sunday 2 Oct. (ABC Mag.) 20/3 To drum home how closely the food fitted the daily rhythms, he's at pains to point out in the introduction that the pictures weren't mocked up by stylists at a studio.

Phrasal verbs

With adverbs in specialized senses.
to drum out
transitive. To expel or dismiss in disgrace, originally from a regiment, garrison, or the like; (sometimes more generally) to drive out. Usually in passive.Originally carried out to the accompaniment of drumming: see note at sense 4b.
ΚΠ
1740 Polit. State Great Brit. Feb. 110 Evans is afterwards to be drummed out with an Halter about his Neck, and his Crime in Capital [printed Captial] Letters affixed on his Back.
1776 Scots Mag. June 312/1 The messenger was sent to prison for a few days, and drummed out.
1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. at March Rogue's March, a tune which is played..for the purpose of drumming out any person who has behaved disorderly..in a camp or garrison.
1869 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 59/2 If I forsake this poor woman in her grief..I am the most selfish scoundrel in the world, and would deserve to be drummed out.
1941 L. Woolf Let. 24 May (1990) 427 The future of democracy..depends to some extent on..whether the people..will drum out at the earliest possible moment the medicine men and the confidence tricksters.
1995 Pacific Current Mar. 7/3 Expect a leadership campaign that is nastier..than any party process since the Waffle [i.e. the Movement for an Independent Socialist Canada] was drummed out in the '70s.
to drum up
1. transitive.
a. To attempt to secure or attract (supporters, customers, business, support, funding, etc.) by aggressive salesmanship, rousing oratory, vigorous persuasion, or the like.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > sell [verb (transitive)] > expose or offer for sale > solicit custom for
to drum up1824
drum1834
pull1896
tout1920
cold-call1985
1824 Niles' Weekly Reg. 9 Oct. 81/1 The violences that may be committed through ‘combinations’ of persons, drumming up parties to favor their own individual aggrandizement.
1832 Republican Banner (Gettysburg, Pa.) 2 Oct. He had his friends drumming up visitors, to go and ‘see the governor and get a drink’.
1849 A. Gray Let. 25 Feb. (1893) I. 362 I will..drum up subscribers for Fendler and Lindheimer.
1916 T. S. Eliot Let. 5 Nov. (1988) I. 157 After Christmas, I hope to see people and drum up trade.
1960 B. Crowther Hollywood Rajah iii. 48 He went out and drummed up the money from some of his more venturesome Boston friends.
1990 Guardian 28 May 17/8 Forever strapped for cash, Kollek is an expert at drumming up support elsewhere.
2013 J. Goldman Going Social p. viii I'm not that interested in speaking engagements or drumming up consulting gigs.
b. More generally: to come up with; to rustle up; to muster (one's courage, energy, etc.).
ΚΠ
1844 Family of Seisers II. ix. 87/2 I rather guess, Captin, we kin drum up a new weddin' gown upon a push.
1899 K. Chopin Awakening xx. 155 Every now and again he drummed up a pretext to bring him to the city.
1908 Evening News 7 May 4/4 He..pauses to gather his wits and drum up his courage before making the attempt.
1962 T. Williams Let. 15 Apr. in Five O'Clock Angel (1991) 180 Perhaps if I can drum up the energy for a summer abroad, things will right themselves.
1989 J. Barfoot Family News vi. 114 It was hard to drum up real lust anyway. Still, there was an odd sort of companionability.
2010 ‘S. Jeffries’ Hellion in her Bed xxi. 275 She couldn't even drum up an excuse for why she hadn't donned her nightdress yet.
2. intransitive. British slang. To make tea in a billycan or the like (cf. drum n.1 10d). Later also: to prepare a meal under rough-and-ready conditions, usually outdoors.Originally in the language of tramps.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > preparation of drinks > [verb (intransitive)] > make tea
to drum up1910
to brew up1916
the world > food and drink > drink > preparation of drinks > [verb (transitive)] > make tea
draw1736
to make tea1845
brew1868
infuse1891
wet1902
to drum up1910
mast1963
1910 Manch. Guardian 15 July 14/1 A sort of common-room..where the flotsam of the roads that had drifted in sat smoking and ‘drumming up’ until a late hour in the evening.
1935 ‘G. Orwell’ Clergyman's Daughter ii. 104 After getting to Bromley they had ‘drummed up’ on a horrible, paper-littered refuse dump.
a1962 G. H. Coward in T. Machin Coward's War (2006) iv. 30 As there did not seem to be any war on just in our locality, somebody suggested ‘drumming up’..before we pushed off.
1991 A. Blair More Tea at Miss Cranston's ix. 104 We were a sight to behold! Then we'd drum up.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

drumv.2

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: drum n.3
Etymology: < drum n.3
Obsolete.
intransitive. To attend a drum (drum n.3 1); to host a drum or drums.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > social event > social gathering > [verb (intransitive)] > give or attend fashionable gatherings
drum1825
squash1867
1825 Countess Granville Let. 30 Jan. (1894) I. 339 Little they'll heed if they see me drum on.
1837 Countess Granville Let. 30 Jan. (1894) II. 221 We must begin again drumming and affronting.
1858 W. M. Thackeray Let. May (1946) IV. 85 The people who are not asked are all angry as I expected and they agree now that it will be wise never to drum again.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2015; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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